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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Law's Lumber Room, by Francis Watt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Law's Lumber Room
-
-Author: Francis Watt
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2017 [EBook #55724]
-[Last updated: October 19, 2020]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAW'S LUMBER ROOM ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by deaurider, David E. Brown and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Law's Lumber Room
-
-
-
-
-_Of this Edition 600 copies have been printed for England and America._
-
-
-
-
- The
-
- Law's Lumber Room
-
- By
-
- Francis Watt
-
-
- London
-
- John Lane, The Bodley Head, Vigo St.
- Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co.
-
- MDCCCXCV
-
-
-
-
- TO
- WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY
- FLOTSAM AND JETSAM
- FROM HIS OLD JOURNAL
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY
-
-
-To the Lumber Room you drag furniture no longer fit for daily use,
-and there it lies, old fashioned, cumbrous, covered year by year with
-fresh depths of dust. Is it fanciful to apply this image to the Law?
-Has not that its Lumber Room of repealed Statutes, discarded methods,
-antiquated text-books--"many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten
-lore"?
-
-But law, even when an actual part of the life of to-day is like to
-prove a tedious thing to the lay reader, can one hope to find the dry
-bones of romance in its antiquities? I venture to answer, "Yes." Among
-all the rubbish, the outworn instruments of cruelty, superstition,
-terror, there are things of interest. "Benefit of Clergy," the "Right
-of Sanctuary," bulk large in English literature; the "Law of the
-Forest" gives us a glimpse into the life of Mediæval England as
-actual as, though so much more sombre than, the vision conjured up in
-Chaucer's magic _Prologue_. "Trial by Ordeal" and "Wager of Battle"
-touch on superstitions and beliefs that lay at the very core of the
-nation's being.
-
-"As full of fictions as English law," wrote Macaulay in the early
-part of the century; but we have changed that, we are more practical,
-if less picturesque, and John Doe and all his tribe are long out of
-date. Between the reign of James I. and that of Victoria all the
-subjects here discussed have suffered change, with one exception. The
-"Press-Gang" is still a legal possibility, but how hard to fancy it
-ever again in actual use!
-
-I fear that these glimpses of other days may seem harsh and sombre;
-there is blood everywhere; the cruel consequences of law or custom are
-pushed to their logical conclusions with ruthless determination. The
-contrast to the almost morbid sentimentalism of to-day is striking.
-So difficult it seems to hit the just mean! But the improvement is
-enormous. Gibes at the Law are the solace of its victims, and no one
-would deprive them of so innocent a relief, yet if these cared to
-enquire they would often find that the mark of their jest had vanished
-years ago to the Lumber Room.
-
-The plan of these papers did not permit a detailed reference to
-authorities, but I have mentioned every work from which I derived
-special assistance. I will only add that this little book originally
-appeared as contributions to the _National Observer_ under Mr W. E.
-Henley's editorship. I have made a few additions and corrections.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- BENEFIT OF CLERGY 1
-
- PEINE FORTE ET DURE 10
-
- A PASSAGE IN SHAKESPEARE (FINES AND RECOVERIES) 26
-
- THE CUSTOM OF THE MANOR 36
-
- DEODANDS 54
-
- THE LAW OF THE FOREST 62
-
- PAR NOBILE FRATRUM (JOHN DOE AND RICHARD ROE) 74
-
- SANCTUARY 84
-
- TRIAL BY ORDEAL 98
-
- WAGER OF BATTLE 107
-
- THE PRESS GANG 120
-
- SUMPTUARY LAWS 129
-
-
-
-
-BENEFIT OF CLERGY
-
-
-"Benefit of Clergy" is a phrase which has entered into English
-literature and English thought. The thing itself exists no longer,
-though the last traces of it were only removed during the present
-reign; but it so strikingly illustrates certain peculiarities of
-English law-making, it has, moreover, so curious a history as to be
-interesting even to-day. It took its rise in times when the pretensions
-of the Church, high in themselves, were highly favoured by the secular
-power. The clergy was a distinct order, and to subject its members to
-the jurisdiction of the secular courts was deemed improper; so, when
-a clerk was seized under a charge of murder, or some other crime, the
-ordinary stepped forth and claimed him for the "Court Christian,"
-whereto the whole matter was at once relegated. There the bishop or
-his deputy sat as judge. There was a jury of twelve clerks before whom
-the prisoner declared his innocence on oath. He was ready with twelve
-compurgators (a species of witnesses to character) who, after their
-kind, said more good of him than they had any warrant for; after which,
-on the question of fact, some witnesses were examined for, but none
-against him. This curious proceeding, which was not abolished till the
-time of Elizabeth, soon became a sham. Nearly every accused got off,
-and the rare verdict of guilty had no worse result than degradation or
-imprisonment.
-
-Now, so far, the system is intelligible, but in the succeeding
-centuries it lost this quality. English legal reformers have ever shown
-a strong disinclination to make a clean sweep of a system, but they
-keep tinkering at it year after year with a view of making it more
-rational or better adapted to current needs. They did so here, and the
-result was a strange jumble of contradictions. First, the privilege
-was confined to such as had the clerical dress and tonsure, afterwards
-it was extended to mere assistants, the very door-keepers being held
-within the charmed circle; yet the line had to be drawn somewhere,
-and how to decide when every ruffian at his wits' end for a defence
-was certain with blatant voice to claim the privilege? Well, could
-he read? If so, ten to one he was an ecclesiastic of some sort, and
-therefore entitled to his clergy. And it soon came that this was the
-only test demanded. If you could read you were presumed a parson, and
-had your right to at least one crime free. As no woman could possibly
-be ordained, she could not "pray her clergy"--(an exception was made
-in the case of a professed nun)--nor might a _bigamus_, who was not
-a man who had committed bigamy, but one who "hath married two wives
-or one widow." However, a statute (1 Edw. VI., c. 12, s. 16, _temp._
-1547) made an end of this latter distinction by declaring, with quaint
-tautology that _bigami_ were to have their clergy, "although they or
-any of them have been divers and sundry times married to any single
-woman or single women, or to any widow or widows, or to two wives
-or more." Before this it might well be that your chance of saving
-your neck depended on whether you had married a widow or not; which
-species was dangerous in a sense undreamt of by Mr Weller. As regards
-the reading, it must not be supposed that a difficult examination was
-passed by the prisoner before he escaped. You had but to read what
-came to be significantly called the Neck-verse from the book which
-the officer of court handed you when you "prayed your clergy." The
-Neck-verse was the first verse of the fifty-first Psalm in the Vulgate.
-It was only three words--_Miserere mei, Deus_: "Have mercy on me, O
-God." It seems strange that it was ever recorded of anyone that he
-did not read, and was therefore condemned to be hanged; for surely
-it were easy to get these words by heart and to repeat them at the
-proper time? This must have been done in many cases, and yet sometimes
-criminals were so densely ignorant and stupid, or it might be merely
-bewildered, that they failed; then the wretch paid the penalty of his
-life. "_Suspendatur_," wrote the scribe against his name, and off he
-was hauled. The endless repetition of this word proved too much for
-official patience, and with brutal brevity the inscription finally
-appears, "Sus." or "S."
-
-And now the Neck-verse was free to everyone were he or were he not in
-holy orders, and he claimed the privilege after conviction, but in the
-reign of Henry VII. (1487) an important change was made. A person who
-claimed clergy was to be branded on the crown of his thumb with an
-"M" if he were a murderer, with a "T" if he were guilty of any other
-felony; if he "prayed his clergy" a second time this was refused him,
-unless he were actually in orders. Of course the mark on the thumb was
-to record his previous escape from justice. It was with this "Tyburn
-T" (as it was called in Elizabethan slang) that Ben Jonson was branded.
-It is only within the last few years that careful Mr Cordy Jeaffreson
-has exhumed the true story from the Middlesex County Records. The
-poet quarrelled and fought a duel with Gabriel Spencer, an actor, and
-probably a former colleague. The affair came off at Shoreditch. Jonson,
-with his rapier, which the indictment (for a reason explained in the
-chapter on "Deodands") values at three shillings, briskly attacked his
-opponent, and almost immediately gave him a thrust in the side, whereof
-Spencer died then and there. Ben was forthwith seized and thrown into
-prison. Whilst waiting his trial he said that spies were set on him,
-but he was too much for them, and afterwards all the judges got from
-him was but "Ay" and "No." Why spies should have been necessary in so
-plain a case is far from clear. It is more significant that a devoted
-priest succeeded in converting him for the time to Roman Catholicism,
-and he afterwards confessed to Drummond of Hawthornden that he had
-come near the gallows. However, what he said, or did not say, is of
-little weight as compared with the evidence of contemporary judicial
-records. The fact is clear that the poet of _Every Man in his Humour_,
-the cunning artist of _Queen and Huntress_, and _Drink to me only with
-thine Eyes_, had a true bill found against him by the grand jury, who
-sat, by the way, in a tavern, for as yet Hicks Hall, the predecessor of
-the Session's-House on Clerkenwell Green, was not.
-
-In October 1598, he was taken to the Old Bailey to stand his trial.
-He pleaded guilty, asked for the book, read like a clerk ("Jonson's
-learned sock," forsooth!), and as the strangely abbreviated Latin of
-the record has it, "_sign' cum lra' T et del_," that is, marked with
-the letter "T," and set at large to repair to "The Sun," "The Bolt,"
-"The Triple Tun," or some other of those dim, enchanting Elizabethan
-taverns, there to give such an account of the transaction as sufficed
-to dissemble it till this age of grubbers and dictionaries wherein
-you are destined to nose every ancient scandal as you go up the
-staircase of letters. It has been suggested that the officer, moved
-to inexplicable tenderness, touched him with a cold iron. The only
-ground for this is that Dekker, in his savage Satiro Mastix; or, _The
-Untrussing of the Humourous Poet_, makes no reference to the "Tyburn
-T." One fancies that Ben speedily acquired a trick of carrying his hand
-so that the mark was not readily seen, or he may have cut or burnt it
-out as others did. All the same, the best evidence shows it to have
-been there.
-
-In the reign of James I. another change was made. Women got the benefit
-of clergy in certain cases, and afterwards they were put on the same
-footing as men. Then in 1705 the necessity for reading was abolished,
-and in 1779 so was branding.
-
-But another process was going on all this time. A great and
-ever-increasing number of crimes were declared to be without benefit
-of clergy. The selection was somewhat capricious. Among the exempted
-felonies were abduction with intent to marry, stealing clothes off
-the racks, stealing the kings' stores, and so on. Naturally the whole
-subject fell into inextricable confusion, and when it was abolished
-in 1827, even pedants must have given a sigh of relief. One detail
-escaped the reformer: since the time of Edward VI. every peer ("though
-he cannot read," saith the statute) enjoyed a privilege akin to that of
-clergy, and it was not till 1841 that this last vestige of the system
-vanished from the statute-book. I will only add that, in its details,
-"benefit of clergy" was even more grotesque and fantastic than it has
-here been possible to set forth.
-
-
-
-
-PEINE FORTE ET DURE
-
-
-In England during many centuries a prisoner was called to the bar
-before trial and enjoined to hold up his right hand, by which act he
-was held to admit himself the person named in the indictment. The
-clerk then asked him, "How say you, are you guilty or not guilty?" If
-he answered, "Not guilty," the next question was: "Culprit, how will
-you be tried?" to which he responded, "By God and my country." "God
-send you a good deliverance," rejoined the official, and the trial
-went forward. If the accused missed any of these responses, or would
-not speak at all, and if the offence were treason or a misdemeanour,
-his silence was taken for confession of guilt, and sentence was passed
-forthwith. If the charge were felony, a jury was empanelled to try
-whether he stood "mute of malice," or "mute by the visitation of
-God." If this last were found, the trial went on; if the other, he
-was solemnly warned by the judges of the terrible consequences summed
-up by Lord Coke (trial of Sir Richard Weston in 1615, for Sir Thomas
-Overbury's murder) in the three words--_onere, frigore, et fame_.
-The proceedings were most commonly adjourned to give him time for
-reflection; but if after every exhortation he remained obdurate, then
-he was adjudged to suffer the _peine forte et dure_. The judgment of
-the Court was in these words: "That you return from whence you came,
-to a low dungeon into which no light can enter; that you be stripped
-naked save a cloth about your loins, and laid down, your back upon the
-ground; that there be set upon your body a weight of iron as great as
-you can bear--and greater; that you have no sustenance, save on the
-first day three morsels of the coarsest bread, on the second day three
-draughts of stagnant water from the pool nearest the prison door, on
-the third day again three morsels of bread as before, and such bread
-and such water alternately from day to day; till you be pressed to
-death; your hands and feet tied to posts, and a sharp stone under your
-back."
-
-There is but one rational way to discuss an institution of this sort.
-Let us trace out its history, for thus only can we explain how it
-came to have an existence at all. For the prisoner himself there was
-usually a very strong reason why _he_ should stand mute. If he were
-convicted of felony his goods were forfeited; while in case of capital
-felony, the result of attainder was corruption of blood so that he
-could neither inherit nor transmit landed property. Often he must
-have known that conviction was certain. Had he fondness enough for
-his heirs--children or other--to make him choose this hideous torture
-instead of milder methods whereby the law despatched the ordinary
-convict from this world? Well, very many underwent the punishment.
-Between 1609-1618 the number was thirty-two (three of them women) in
-rural Middlesex alone. "_Mortuus en pen' fort' et dur'_," so the clerk
-wrote for epitaph against each name, and something still stranger than
-the penalty itself is revealed to us by an examination of the original
-records. Many of the culprits were evidently totally destitute, and
-these underwent the _peine forte et dure_ from stupidity, obstinacy, or
-sheer indifference to mortal suffering and death.
-
-The custom of pressing did not obtain its full development at once, and
-there is some difficulty as to how it began. A plausible explanation is
-given in Pike's "History of Crime," and is supported by the authority
-of the late Mr Justice Stephen. At one time a man charged with a
-serious offence was tried by ordeal; but by paying money to the king,
-it was possible to get the exceptional privilege of a trial by jury.
-Thus, when the accused was asked how he would be tried, his answer
-originally ran, "by God" (equal to by ordeal), or "by my country"
-(equal to by jury), since to put yourself on the country meant to
-submit yourself to this last. But trial by ordeal was abolished
-about 1215, and the alternative was a privilege to be claimed, not a
-necessity to be endured. Offenders soon discovered that by standing
-mute and declining to claim this privilege, they put the Court in a
-difficulty. The ideas of those distant days were simple exceedingly,
-and a legal form had strange force and efficacy. To put a prisoner
-before a jury without his consent was not to be thought of; but how
-to get his consent? At first the knot was rather cut than loosened.
-Thus, in some cases, the accused were put to death right off for not
-consenting to be tried "according to the law and custom of the realm."
-Then this was held too severe, and under Edward I., in the proceedings
-of the Parliament of Westminster, occurs the earliest definite mention
-of the punishment. It was enacted that notorious felons refusing to
-plead should be confined in the _prison forte et dure_. Here they went
-"barefooted and bareheaded, in their coat only in prison, upon the bare
-ground continually night and day, fastened down with irons," and only
-eating and drinking on alternate days as already set forth. It was
-bad enough, no doubt, but not of necessity fatal. So the authorities
-perceived, and they again cut the knot by a policy of starvation. So
-one infers from the case of Cecilia, wife of John Rygeway, in the time
-of Edward III. Cecilia was indicted for the murder of her husband; she
-refused to plead. Being committed to prison, she lived without meat or
-drink for forty days; and this being set down to the Virgin Mary, she
-was thereupon allowed to go free. This procedure seems to have been
-found too slow, and the increase of business at the assizes seemed like
-to end in a hopeless block. Were the judges to encamp in a country town
-while the prisoners made up their mind as to pleading? Something was
-wanted to "mend or end" the stubborn rascals; and under Henry IV., in
-the beginning of the fifteenth century, the "prison" _forte et dure_
-became the "peine" _forte et dure_: with the consequence that, if the
-accused declined to plead, there was an end of him in a few hours, the
-provision of bread and water being a mere remnant of the older form of
-sentence. This procedure lasted till 1772, when the 12 Geo. III., c.
-20 made "standing mute in cases of felony equivalent to conviction."
-In 1827 it was enacted by 7 and 8 Geo. IV., c. 28, "that in such
-cases a plea of not guilty should be entered for the person accused."
-The curious formal dialogue between the clerk and the prisoner was
-abolished that same year. Something stronger than exhortation was now
-and again used before the obdurate prisoner was sentenced to pressing,
-thus at the Old Bailey in 1734, the thumbs of one John Durant were tied
-together with whipcord, which the executioner strung up hard and tight
-in presence of the Court; he was promised the _peine forte et dure_
-if this did not answer, but upon a little time being given him for
-reflection, he speedily made up his mind to plead not guilty.
-
-It is difficult to explain the distinction drawn between ordinary
-felony on the one hand and treason and misdemeanours on the other.
-Perhaps the explanation is that the last, being much lighter offences,
-were never made the subject of trial by ordeal, and that treason
-being a crime endangering the very existence of the State, a sort of
-necessity compelled the judge to proceed in the most summary manner.
-No student of English History needs to be reminded that a trial for
-treason resulted almost as a matter of course in a conviction for
-treason. Peers of the realm had many privileges, but they were not
-exempt from the consequences of standing mute. Nor, as already noted,
-were women. Perhaps it were unreasonable to expect a criticism of the
-system from contemporary judges or text writers; but what they did say
-was odd enough; they did not condemn pressing, but they highly extolled
-the clemency of the law which directed the Court to reason with and
-admonish the accused before it submitted him to this dread penalty.
-
-I shall now give some examples of practice. Fortunately (or
-unfortunately you may think as you read) we have at least one case
-recorded in great detail, though, curiously enough, it has escaped the
-notice of an authority so eminent as Mr Justice Stephen.
-
-Margaret Clitherow was pressed to death at York on Lady Day, March
-25th, 1586, and the story thereof was written by John Mush, secular
-priest, and her spiritual director. Margaret's husband was a
-Protestant, though his brother was a priest, and all his children
-appear to have been of the older faith. Accused of harbouring Jesuit
-and Seminary priests, of hearing mass, and so on, she was committed
-to York Castle, and in due time was arraigned in the Common Hall.
-In answer to the usual questions, she said that she would be tried
-"by God and by your own consciences," and refused to make any other
-answer. It was sheer obstinacy: she was a married woman, and she could
-have lost nothing by going to trial. But she coveted martyrdom, which
-everybody concerned appears, at first at any rate, to have been anxious
-to deny her. It was plainly intimated that if she would let herself
-be tried she would escape: "I think the country," said Clinch, the
-senior judge, "cannot find you guilty upon the slender evidence." The
-proceedings were adjourned, and the same night "Parson Whigington, a
-Puritan preacher," came and argued with her, apparently in the hope of
-persuading her to plead; but he failed to change her purpose; the next
-day she was brought back to the Hall. Something of a wrangle ensued
-between herself and Clinch, and in the end the latter seemed on the
-point of pronouncing sentence. Then Whigington stood up and began to
-speak; "the murmuring and noise in the Hall would not suffer him to be
-heard;" but he would not be put off, and "the judge commanded silence
-to hear him." He made a passionate appeal to the Court ("Did not
-perhaps God open the mouth of Balaam's ass?" is the somewhat ungracious
-comment of Father Mush.) "My lord," said he, "take heed what you do.
-You sit here to do justice; this woman's case is touching life and
-death, you ought not, either by God's law or man's, to judge her to die
-upon the slender witness of a boy;" with much more to the same effect.
-Clinch was at his wits' end, and went so far as to entreat the prisoner
-to plead in the proper form: "Good woman, I pray you put yourself to
-the country. There is no evidence but a boy against you, and whatsoever
-they (the jury) do, yet we may show mercy afterwards." She was moved
-not a whit; and then Rhodes, the other judge, broke in: "Why stand
-we all day about this naughty, wilful woman?" Yet once again she was
-entreated, but as vainly as before; it was evident that the law must
-take its course; and "then the judge bade the sheriff look to her,
-who pinioned her arms with a cord." She was carried back to prison
-through the crowd, of whom some said, "She received comfort from the
-Holy Ghost;" others, "that she was possessed of a merry devil." When
-her husband was told of her condemnation, "he fared like a man out of
-his wits, and wept so vehemently that the blood gushed out of his nose
-in great quantity." Some of the Council suggested that she was with
-child. There seems to have been some foundation for the remark, at any
-rate, Clinch caught eagerly at the idea. "God defend she should die if
-she be with child," said he several times, when the sheriff asked for
-directions, and others of sterner mould were pressing for her despatch.
-Kind-hearted Whigington tried again and again to persuade her; and the
-Lord Mayor of York, who had married her mother ("a rich widow which
-died before this tragedy the summer last"), begged her on his knees,
-"with great show of sorrow and affection," to pronounce the words
-that had such strange efficacy. It was all in vain, so at last even
-Whigington abandoned his attempt, and "after he had pitied her case
-awhile, he departed and came no more."
-
-Her execution was fixed for Friday, and the fact was notified to her
-the night before. In the early morning of her last day on earth she
-quietly talked the matter over with another woman. "I will procure,"
-the woman said, "some friends to lay weight on you, that you may be
-quickly despatched from your pain." She answered her that it must not
-be. At eight the sheriffs came for her, and "she went barefoot and
-barelegged, her gown loose about her." The short street was crowded
-with people to whom she dealt forth alms. At the appointed place,
-one of the sheriffs, "abhorring the cruel fact, stood weeping at the
-door;" but the other, whose name was Fawcett, was of harder stuff. He
-"commanded her to put off her apparel," whereupon she and the other
-woman "requested him, on their knees, that she might die in her smock,
-and that for the honour of womankind they would not see her naked."
-That could not be granted, but they were allowed to clothe her in a
-long habit of linen she had herself prepared for the occasion. She now
-lay down on the ground. On her face was a handkerchief. A door was laid
-upon her. "Her hands she joined towards her face"; but Fawcett said
-they must be bound, and bound they were to two posts, "so that her body
-and her arms made a perfect cross." They continued to vex the passing
-soul with vain words, but at last they put the weights on the door. In
-her intolerable anguish she gave but a single cry: "Jesu! Jesu! Jesu!
-have mercy upon me!" Then there was stillness; though the end was not
-yet. "She was in dying one quarter of an hour. A sharp stone as much as
-a man's fist put under her back, upon her was laid a quantity of seven
-or eight hundredweight to the least, which, breaking her ribs, caused
-them, to burst forth of the skin." It was now nine in the morning, but
-not till three of the afternoon were the braised remains taken from
-the press.
-
-Stories of violence and cruelty serve not our purpose unless they
-illustrate some point, and I shall but refer to two other cases.
-
-Major Strangeways was arraigned in 1658 (under the Commonwealth be
-it noted) for the murder of his brother-in-law. In presence of the
-coroner's jury he was made to take the corpse by the hand and touch its
-wounds, for it was supposed that, if he were guilty, these would bleed
-afresh. There was no bleeding, but this availed him nothing, and he was
-put on his trial at the Old Bailey in due course. He refused to plead,
-and made no secret of his motive; he foresaw conviction, and desired
-to prevent the forfeiture of his estate. He was ordered to undergo the
-_peine forte et dure_. The press was put on him angle-wise; it was
-enough to hurt, but not to kill, so the bystanders benevolently added
-their weight, and in ten minutes all was over. The dead body was then
-displayed to the public.
-
-Again, in 1726, a man named Burnworth was arraigned at Kingston for
-murder. At first he refused to plead, but after being pressed for an
-hour and three-quarters with four hundredweight of iron, he yielded. He
-was carried back to the dock, said he was not guilty, and was tried,
-convicted, and hanged. There was at least one case in the reign of
-George II.--but enough of such horrors.
-
-
-
-
-A PASSAGE IN SHAKESPEARE
-
-FINES AND RECOVERIES
-
-
-"Is this the fine of his fines, and the recovery of his recoveries, to
-have his fine pate full of fine dust? Will his vouchers vouch him no
-more of his purchases, and double ones too, than the length and breadth
-of a pair of indentures?" Thus the Prince of Denmark moralising in the
-graveyard scene in Hamlet over the skull of a supposed lawyer: with
-more to the same effect, all showing that Shakespeare had a knowledge
-of law terms remarkable in a layman, and that he used them with curious
-precision. In the huge body of Shakespearian literature there are
-special works (one by Lord Chancellor Campbell) on the fact, which
-has been used to buttress up the Baconian authorship theory (indeed,
-it is the only positive fact at all in point). Again, it has been
-conjectured that the dramatist spent some time in a lawyer's office,
-and that phrases from the deeds he engrossed stuck in his memory. It is
-far more likely that, being the man of his age he was, he would read
-in and round the law as well as much else for its own sake, and that
-fines and recoveries were so odd in themselves, and so excellently
-illustrative of English history and procedure, that they fairly took
-his mighty fancy.
-
-Recoveries were already some two hundred years old in his time, and,
-to judge from the tone of the passage, people must even then have held
-them in derision. But they were to last full two hundred years more;
-for not till 1833 did they vanish from the scene. Recoveries were
-methods of disentailing an estate by means of a complicated series of
-fictions. They arose in this way:--Before 1285, when land was given
-to a man and the heirs of his body, the judges ruled that, the moment
-a son was born, the father held the estate as a simple freehold,
-which he could sell or make away with very much as he chose. The
-great landowners were ill-content at this; they meant their tenants
-to enjoy their estates only as long as they rendered useful service
-in return, and if issue failed a man, they thought the land should
-revert to his lord on his death. Hence in that year an act procured
-by their influence, called _De Donis Conditionalibus_, or the Statute
-of Westminster the Second (13 Ed. I., c. 1), created the Estate
-Tail (_i.e._ _Taillé_, or restricted). It provided that land given
-to a man and his heirs as above, reverted to the original donor on
-failure of the donee's issue. Blackstone waxes eloquent over the evils
-that ensued. Children declined obedience to a father who could not
-disinherit; farmers lost their leases, which had no force against the
-heir; and creditors were defrauded of their debts, which constituted
-no charge on the land, nay, treasons were fostered, insomuch as the
-traitor's interest lapsing at his death, nothing was left for the king
-to seize. Yet it was not till the reign of Edward IV. that a device
-was found to evade the Statute. _Taltarum's Case_ was decided in 1472.
-It is loosely said that this established the validity of recoveries,
-but they were in use some time before, and Sir Frederick Pollock will
-have it that it was the oddity of the name which made a landmark
-of the decision. A Recovery was a sort of friendly or fictitious
-action, whereby the estate was adjudged to an outsider, whose claim,
-though baseless--if one did not look beyond the four corners of the
-action--was acquiesced in by the nominal defendant.
-
-The mediæval lawyer was usually a priest, and he had found those
-entails grievous obstacles in the way of the Church's aggrandisement.
-Perhaps, too, as the country grew in wealth, so rigid a law of
-settlement bore hard on an ever-waxing commercial class. To repeal
-the Statute seemed impossible, but the great landowners, while proof
-against force and impermeable to argument, were not hard to outwit. A
-legal complication passed their understanding; and this one, however
-brazen, had the patronage of many powerful interests. Thus, and thus
-only, may the fact of their acquiescence be explained.
-
-And now let us trace out the steps in a common recovery with "double
-voucher." The judges had already made one preparatory breach in the
-law. A tenant in tail could dispose of his estate if he left other
-lands of the same value; for these his heirs held under the same
-conditions as the original property. The principle of this decision was
-ingeniously used as a lever to overthrow the system.
-
-Suppose A, tenant in tail, had contracted to sell his land to B: he
-began by formally disposing of it to C, usually his attorney, and
-technically called "Tenant to the _præcipe_," or writ. Then B commenced
-an action in the Common Pleas against C to recover the estate in
-question, which, he asserted, had been wrongfully taken from him. C,
-instead of defending the action, "vouched to warranty" A: that is, he
-called in A to defend, on the ground that the said A had covenanted to
-support his title; but A, instead of defending the action, "vouched to
-warranty" D. This last, called the "common vouchee" (in the form in
-Blackstone he appears as "Jacob Morland"), was always the "Crier to the
-Court," and for playing his part received the modest fee of fourpence
-on each recovery. At first he (Jacob) made a great show at fight; he
-denied all B's statements, and "put himself upon the country:" _i.e._
-he demanded that the case should go before a jury for trial. B then
-craved leave "to imparl" (_i.e._ to have a private conference with
-Jacob), and the proceedings were solemnly adjourned. When they were
-resumed Jacob was not to be found: "he hath (it was adjudged) departed
-in contempt of the Court." Evidently, or so it seemed, he had no answer
-to make. Then B's claim was allowed; C was to have of the lands of A
-a quantity equal to what he had nominally lost; whilst A, in his turn,
-was to have the same remedy against Jacob, who, having no means at all,
-cheerfully accepted much paper responsibility. Then a writ was issued
-to the sheriff of the county wherein the lands were situate, directing
-him to give possession to B, whose title was constituted by a record of
-all the aforesaid transactions.
-
-As the centuries went by the proceedings became ever less substantial,
-the action was always commenced by the issue of a writ in the usual
-way, but most of the other steps were only taken on paper. Sir
-Frederick Pollock says, that if the disentailer were a peer, a sergeant
-was actually briefed to move the court in the matter: also, one must
-note that lands held from the crown were never subject to this process
-(nor can they now be disentailed without a special act of Parliament).
-By another barefaced fiction, colonial property might be disentailed
-in England. The deed roundly asserted that the island of Antigua (or
-wherenot) lay in the parish of St Mary, Islington--the operation of
-this geographical miracle giving jurisdiction to the Court of Common
-Pleas. One would suppose that something simpler might have served; but
-though laymen jeered, lawyers regarded these quaint formalities with
-strange reverence. My Lord Coke mentions with solemn reprobation a
-counsel named Hoord who scoffed thereat in the House of Lords, and whom
-a judge gravely rebuked as not worthy to be of the profession of the
-law, for that he "durst speak against common recoveries;" and as late
-as 1820, Thomas Coventry, Esq., of Lincoln's Inn, concludes his learned
-treatise on the subject with an eloquent if slightly confused protest
-against any change, "which could know no end but an apparent confusion,
-or clearing away a path for the access of some modern Pretender to
-strip the ivy from the venerable oak of our boasted constitution, the
-only emblem that remains of its antiquity and endurance."
-
-And now for a word on fines. These were so called for that they made
-an end of a controversy. They were simpler and even more ancient than
-recoveries. A fictitious action was begun by the purchaser against the
-vendor of an estate, wherein the latter soon gave in: the case was
-compromised, a fine was paid to the Crown, upon the Court giving its
-consent to this termination of the proceedings, and the record thereof
-became the purchaser's title. They were likewise used to bar entails,
-though they were not so effectual as recoveries. One of the first Acts
-of the Reform Parliament of 1833 was the Statute for the Abolition of
-Fines and Recoveries. It was a mere question of procedure, for the
-law itself remained unaltered: but disentailment was effected by the
-enrolment of a deed in Chancery. And now the dust lies thick on shelves
-of text-books--a whole system of learning, full of intricate details,
-the creation of centuries of perverse ingenuity.
-
-And the land-owners? These, too, long since availed themselves of the
-dark and subtle devices of the conveyancer. Sir Orlando Bridgman, a
-great lawyer of the Commonwealth, and finally Chief Justice of the
-Common Pleas under Charles II., invented and perfected the system of
-family settlements which to-day secures the secular interests of our
-great historic houses, as well as, if less directly than, any enactment
-could do.
-
-
-
-
-THE CUSTOM OF THE MANOR
-
-
-Has chance or necessity ever opened to you the charter-chest of the
-respectable solicitor in some country town? Then, among his records,
-you have noted an interminable series of parchment volumes--very thick,
-very closely written, some centuries old, and one in current use. These
-are the court-rolls of the Manor of Wherenot. If you can spell out the
-beautifully written mediæval characters, you are sure to light on many
-a quaint record of by-gone folk and their ways, for, better than aught
-else, the manor and its muniments preserve for us the English past.
-
-Manors, they used to say, arose in this fashion. A great lord obtained
-a piece of land from the King; part he disposed of to tenants who held
-of him in freehold (this sub-infeudation was stopped by the statute
-_quia emptores_ in 1290); the rest was his domain, on part of which he
-built the manor house, another part was cultivated by villeins, then
-the cotters had dwellings with portions of land, and the residue was
-waste, where the folk of the manor pastured their cattle, gathered
-fuel, and made their ways. Sometimes these villeins were slaves, but
-each had his patch of soil, wherefor he rendered some servile office to
-his lord, ploughing his land, garnering his crops, or such like. The
-business of the manor was transacted in two courts, the Court Baron
-and the Customary Court. The first was attended by the freeholders,
-who themselves constituted the Court; the second by the villeins,
-who merely hearkened to and witnessed the doings of the lord or his
-steward. When a villein died, the fact that the new tenant had such and
-such a field on condition of rendering so many days' labour yearly was
-noted in the records or roll of the Customary Court, and this roll,
-or a copy of it, becoming his title, he was dubbed a copyholder. In
-theory he was a mere tenant at the will of the lord, but time fettered
-the lord's will, until the principle was evolved that it must be
-exercised according to the custom of the manor, for "custom" as Lord
-Coke put it, "is the life of the manor," and so it came about that the
-holder had fixity of tenure while he did his service. His position
-steadily improved, the slave became free, the servile toil a money
-payment, and now the court agenda merely register changes of title.
-This account of the manor may serve for description, but does not
-represent the real origin, which has not yet been exactly ascertained.
-It was a fragment of Old England, with a lord usually of Norman race
-as head, and the relations between head and members elaborated and
-controlled by the theories and devices of the mediæval lawyer. As
-manorial law was custom, old local usages were preserved unaltered;
-thus, whilst the root idea of feudalism was that the eldest son should
-inherit his father's land, and the manor itself did so descend, within
-it an extraordinary diversity of usage obtained. By a custom similar
-to that of Gavelkind (in Kent), the copyholder's estate was sometimes
-parted equally among all his sons. In other places, Borough-English
-prevailed, that is, the youngest son took everything, to the exclusion
-of his elder brothers; nay, by an odd application of the maxim "better
-late than never," a posthumous child ousted the brother already in
-possession; or, again, the widow or widower inherited. When the tenant
-died, the lord had a right to seize his best chattel (usually a beast),
-this was called a Heriot, and it is yet here and there exacted. Many
-customs are old Saxon, many customs were invented, or at any rate
-twisted into fantastic rights from mere whim or a not very cleanly
-sense of humour, but here one must often merely accept the fact, for to
-try it by the rule of right reason were absurd.
-
-Most manors were held of the Crown, in return for services sometimes of
-the oddest character; thus, Solomon De Campis (or Solomon At-Field)
-had land in Kent on condition that, "as often as our lord the King
-would cross the sea, the said Solomon and his heirs should go along
-with him to hold his head on the sea, if it was needful;" and certain
-jurors solemnly present on their oath that "the aforesaid Solomon fully
-performed the aforesaid service." Our early kings provided against
-every possible contingency. One tenant enjoyed land by the service
-of holding the King's stirrup when he mounted his horse at Cambridge
-Castle. Another must make _hastias_ in the King's kitchen on the day
-of his coronation. The glossaries are dumb as to this mysterious
-dish, though the learned darkly hint at haggis! Or was it "a certain
-potage called the mess of _Giron_," which, being enriched with lard,
-was called _Maupygernon_--which last is possibly mediæval Welsh for a
-haggis? Thomas Bardolf, who died, lord of Addington, in 5 Edward III.,
-was pledged to compound three portions of this dainty dish against
-Coronation Day, and serve them up smoking hot, one to the King, one
-to his Grace of Canterbury, and the third "to whomsoever the King
-would." Other manors were held on the tenure of presenting to the
-King a white young brach ("lady the brach" of _King Lear_) with red
-ears; of delivering a hundred herrings baked in twenty pasties; of
-finding the King a penny for an oblation, whenever he came to hear
-mass at Maplescamp, in Kent: gifts of roses, falcons, capons (which
-last dainties your mediæval sovereign held in special favour), were
-abundant. But how to riddle this one? The manor of Shrivenham, in
-Berks, was held (_temp._ Edward III.) by the family of Becket, whose
-head, whenever the King passed over a certain bridge in those parts,
-must present himself with two white capons, whereto he directed the
-royal attention in choice mediæval Latin, "Behold," he said, "my lord,
-these two capons, which you shall have another time, but not now,"
-which pleasantry reminds one of the current vulgarism, "Will you have
-it now, or wait till you get it?" The service of the Dymocks, owners of
-Scrivelsby in Lincoln, as King's champions, and of the Duke of Norfolk,
-as Earl Marshal of England, curious enough in themselves, are too
-notorious for this crowded page.
-
-A few quaint tenures are of quite modern origin. Thus the honour of
-Woodstock (an honour was a lordship over several manors: so "Waverley
-Honour" in Scott's great romance) is held by the tenure of presenting
-a banner each second of August at Windsor Castle; that being the
-anniversary of Blenheim, fought in 1704; and on each 18th of June the
-Duke of Wellington must likewise send to the same place, for the estate
-of Strathfieldsay, a tri-coloured flag to commemorate Waterloo. The
-last century legal antiquary pricked up his ears at a fine scandal
-which he fondly imagined in connection with the manors of Poyle and
-Catteshill, both near Guildford. Their holders were bound to provide
-a certain number (twelve in one instance) of young women, called
-_meretrices_, for the service of the royal court. Dry-as-dust shook
-his solemn head, invented pimp-tenure (a "peculiarly odious kind of
-tenure" he explained), and the forerunner of the man who writes to _The
-Times_ (it was then to the _Gentleman's Magazine_) cracked some not
-particularly choice jokes on the subject. A wider knowledge restored
-the moral character of the King, his lords, and the much-slandered
-young women, whose decent dust may now repose in peace. In mediæval
-Latin the word was widely used for the female servant general or
-special, and these were, it seems, neither more nor less than
-laundry-maids.
-
-Manors of an early date were ofttimes held under other manors on
-equally whimsical conditions. A snowball at summer and a red rose at
-Christmas are extravagantly picturesque. A hawk was a common rent; but
-in one case it was carried to the Earl of Huntingdon's house, by the
-yielder, attended by his wife, three boys, three horses, and three
-greyhounds; and these must be housed for forty days at the earl's
-expense, while his countess must give the lady her second best gown.
-Again, the tenant of Brindwood in Essex, upon every change, must come
-with his wife, his man, and his maid, all a-horseback to the rectory,
-"with his hawke on his fist and his greyhound in his slip"; he blows
-three blasts with his horn, and then receives curious gifts, and
-thereafter departeth. The lord of the Manor of Essington, in Stafford,
-must bring a goose every New Year's Day to the head manor-house at
-Hilton. Here he drives it about the fire, which Jack of Hilton blows
-furiously, and (one regrets to add) most improperly. But Jack may be
-forgiven, for he is but "an image of brass about twelve inches high,"
-whose description you read at length in old Thomas Blount, the great
-recorder of all these mad pranks.
-
-The holding of Pusey in Berks by the Pusey Horn, gifted, it is said,
-by King Canute, is well-known. Sir Philip de Somerville, knight, was
-bound to hunt and capture the Earl of Lancaster's _greese_ (wild swine)
-for my lord's larder upon St Peter's Day in August. This he did till
-Holy-Rood Day, when he dined with the steward, and after dinner "he
-shall kiss the porter and depart." This same Sir Philip de Somerville
-held the Manor of Whychenover at half terms from the Earl on condition
-that there ever hung in his hall one bacon flitch to be assigned to a
-happy married couple yearly in Lent, after a variety of ceremonies like
-those in the more famous case of Dunmow: the disposal of the flitch
-there being likewise according to "the custom of the manor."
-
-In the customs that made up the inner life of the manor one finds a
-diversity too great for classification. However, those old English
-folk were a merry lot; with usages not sad nor savage, but having much
-sensible joy in good meat and drink. At Baldock, in Hertfordshire,
-the Customary Court was holden at dinner-time, whereto every baker and
-vintner within the bounds must send bread and ale which the steward and
-his jury "cam' to pree," and presently gave their verdict "if these
-be wholesome for man's body or no." To the Manor of Hutton Conyers
-there was attached a great common, where many townships pastured their
-sheep; and the shepherd of each township "did fealty by bringing to the
-Court a large apple pie, and a twopenny sweet cake." For refreshment,
-"furmity and mustard, well mixed in an earthen pot, is placed before
-the shepherds, which they sup with spoons provided by themselves, and
-if any forget his spoon then, for so the customary law wills it, he
-must lay him down upon his belly, and sup the furmity with his face to
-the pot or dish." And the custom further permits the bystanders "to dip
-his face into the furmity," to the great delight of all present. To
-finer issues is the money provided by Magdalen College, Oxford, for
-certain manors of theirs in Hampshire, _pro mulieribus hockantibus_, as
-the dog Latin of the college accounts hath it. On Hock Day, annually,
-"the women stop the ways with ropes, and pull passengers to them,
-desiring something to be laid out in pious uses": the men having hocked
-the women after the same fashion the day before. There are traces of
-this usage further afield than Hampshire. Not less jovial were the
-tenants of South Malling, in Kent, who were bound to pay scot-ale,
-which fund they agreeably expended in "drink with the bedel of the Lord
-Archbishop." The case of Stamford, in Lincoln, is noteworthy as showing
-the origin of one peculiar custom. In the time of King John, William,
-Earl Warren, was lord of the place. One day he saw from his castle wall
-"two bulls fighting for a cow in the castle meadow;" their bellowing
-attracted all the butcher's dogs in the place; and these, in company
-with a host of rag-tag and bobtail, chased one of the champions in
-and out the town till he went mad; all which so delighted Earl Warren,
-that he forthwith gifted the common to the butchers on condition that
-they provided a mad bull six weeks before Christmas Day, "for the
-continuance of that sport for ever."
-
-It is impossible even to conjecture the origin of other customs. In
-most manors, when a copy-holder died, his widow had in free-bench (or
-what the common law calls dower) the whole or part of his lands. There
-was one restriction: she must remain "sole and chaste." Yet, if she
-forgot herself, her case was not altogether past praying for in the
-Manor of Enborne in Berkshire. At the next Customary Court she appeared
-strangely mounted upon a black ram, her face to the tail, the which
-grasping in her hand, she recited, sure the merriest, maddest rhyme it
-ever entered into the heart of man to conceive--
-
- "Here I am
- Riding upon a black ram"----
-
-Alas, that the rest must be silence! The _Spectator_, greatly daring,
-gives it in full; but that was as far back as November 1st, 1714. A
-like custom ruled the Manor of Kilmersdon, in Somerset, where the
-doggerel, if briefer and blunter, is at least equally gross. And here
-one must refer to the _jus primæ noctis_, that lewd historic jest
-which, in England at any rate, was ever a sheer delusion. True that on
-the marriage of a villein's daughter a fine was paid to the lord, but
-this was not to spare her blushes, but as compensation to him for the
-loss of her services--inasmuch as she took the domicile of her husband.
-Nay, the custom of the manor usually made for morality. There was a
-fine called child-wit exacted on the birth of an illegitimate child,
-sometimes from the infant's father, or, again, from the father of its
-mother. Nay, in one or two places the unlucky lover forfeited all his
-goods and chattels. On the other hand a curious privilege attached to
-an oak in Knoll Wood in the Manor of Terley in Staffordshire: "In case
-oath were made that the bastard was got within the umbrage or reach of
-its boughs," neither spiritual nor temporal power had ought to say, and
-the man got off scot free.
-
-The curious tenacity of the manorial custom is well shown in the case
-of Pomber in Hampshire: the Annual Court, in accordance with immemorial
-usage, must be held in the open air, but the inconvenience of this was
-obviated by an immediate adjournment of the proceedings to the nearest
-tavern. The records were not kept on parchment, but "on a piece of wood
-called a tally, about three feet long and an inch and a half square,
-furnished every day by the steward." In time these strange muniments
-became worm-eaten and illegible; and, as occupying much needed room,
-were thrown to the flames by the dozen. (It will be remembered that the
-old Houses of Parliament were set on fire and destroyed on the burning
-of the exchequer tallies, October 1834.) Some of the survivors were
-produced as evidence in a case heard at Winchester, which fact provoked
-"a counsellor on the opposite side of the question" to dub it "a wooden
-cause." The obvious retort--that his was a wooden joke--seems lacking;
-but possibly this gem of legal humour emanated from the Bench: how
-often one has seen its like!
-
-Still stranger was the Lawless Court of the Honour of Raleigh: it
-was held in the darkness of cockcrow; the steward and the suitors
-(i.e., those bound to attend the Court) mumbled their words in scarce
-audible fashion; candles, pens, ink, were all forbidden; for, as the
-authorities vaguely put it, "they supply that office with a coal." To
-ensure a punctual attendance, the suitor "forfeits to his lord double
-his rent every hour he is absent." The learned Camden affirms it was
-all to punish the aboriginal tenants for a conspiracy hatched in the
-darkness of the night; again he sees in it a remnant of an old Teutonic
-custom; and in the end you suspect that he knows as little as yourself.
-
-Then there was the white bull which the tenants of the monks of Bury
-St Edmunds were bound by their leases to provide, that childless
-women might present it to the shrine of the martyred king of East
-Anglia; there was the fine called "thistletake," which the owner
-of beasts crossing the common, and snatching at the "symbol dear,"
-must pay to the lord of the Manor of Halton; there are the "three
-clove-gillieflowers" which the tenants of Hame in Surrey shall render
-at the King's coronation; there are all sorts of minute details as to
-house-bote and fire-bote, and common of piscary and turbary. One more
-custom and we have done. In the time of Richard the Lion-heart, Randal
-Blundeville, Earl of Chester, was on one occasion sore pressed by the
-Flintshire Welsh. He summoned to his aid his constable of Cheshire,
-one Roger Lacy, "for his fierceness surnamed Hell." It was fair-time
-at Chester, and Roger, putting himself at the head of the motley crowd
-marched off to his relief. The Welsh heard, saw, and bolted, and the
-grateful earl there and then promulgated a charter granting to Roger
-and his heirs for ever, "power over all fiddlers, lechers, light
-ladies (the charter has a briefer and stronger term), and cobblers in
-Chester." Under Henry VII. we find the then grantee exacting from the
-minstrels (_inter alia_) "four flagons of wine and a lance," whilst
-each of the aforesaid ladies must pay fourpence on the feast of St
-John the Baptist. Under Elizabeth, various acts were aimed at rogues,
-vagabonds, and sturdy beggars, but always with a saving provision as
-to this Chester jurisdiction, and in later times the Vagrant Act (17
-George II., cap. 5) had a like reservation.
-
-
-
-
-DEODANDS
-
-
-At one time or other you have looked, one supposes, into that huge
-collection of curiosities and horrors known as the State Trials. You
-may possibly have noted the form of indictment in the murder cases;
-and if so, one odd detail must have impressed you. Having set forth
-the weapon used by the murderer, the document invariably goes on to
-estimate its money value: for, having been instrumental in taking human
-life, it was forfeit to the Crown, and it or its price had to be duly
-accounted for. It was called a Deodand, but the name was applied to
-many things besides arms used with malice aforethought. Thus, a man
-died by misadventure: then was the material cause active or passive?
-For instance, his end might come because a tree fell on him, or
-because he fell from a tree, in either case the wood was a deodand,
-and so forfeited. The name is from _Deo dandum_--a thing that must be
-offered to God, and this because in early mediæval times the Church or
-the poor had the ultimate benefit.
-
-For the origin of the custom one must go far back. In Hebrew, Greek,
-and Roman legislation, the physical object that caused the loss of
-human life was held accursed, and hence was destroyed or forfeited.
-In England a thing became a deodand only when the coroner's jury (or
-more rarely some other authority) had found it the cause of death;
-which death, moreover, must happen within a year and a day of the
-accident. If it did, the thing was seized, no matter where it was, or
-who had it. In default of delivery the township was liable, and it
-was the Sheriff's duty to get the value therefrom. If a man had _per
-infortunium_ (or without blame) used the article, the jury found that
-as a fact, and he was acquitted, or rather pardoned; but in strict
-law his goods were forfeit as late as 1828. And not everything causing
-death was a deodand. If a man fell into the water, was carried under a
-mill-wheel, and perished, the wheel was forfeit but not the mill. The
-distinction was sometimes difficult. Here are two actual examples. A
-cart and a waggon came into collision; the man in the cart was pitched
-out under the waggon-wheels and died. The two vehicles, all they held,
-the horses that drew them, were adjudged deodands, "because they all
-moved _ad mortem_." Again, a ship was hauled up for repairs, toppled
-over on a shipwright at work, and was declared forfeit. Your mediæval
-lawyer was nothing if not subtle, and he soon raised doubts enough
-to gravel a schoolman. He questioned if things fixed to the freehold
-could become deodands. Suppose a man were ringing a church bell, and
-the rope, getting twisted round his windpipe in some strange fashion,
-choked the life out of him: how then? The rope seemed past praying
-for, but what about the bell? The learned differed, yet all agreed that
-if the timber holding the bell got loose, and came crashing down on the
-sexton, the royal treasury, of clear right, pounced on rope, and bell,
-and timber. How furiously, with what a wealth of legal learning and
-invention, one fancies the utter barristers must have "mooted" those
-fascinating points after supper in the halls of their ancient Inns!
-
-The decisions were hard to reconcile. Thus, in Edward the Third's time,
-it was held that if a man fall to his death from his horse against the
-trunk of a tree, the horse is forfeit, but not the tree. But in the
-same reign a distinction was drawn. One William Daventry, a servant to
-John Blaburgh, engaged in watering a horse, was grievously hurt. He was
-carried to his master's house "_apud Fleet Street in suburbio London_",
-and there at even he died. At first the horse was adjudged a deodand,
-but Blaburgh got the inquisition quashed on the ground that the horse
-had not thrown his rider. Again, if a lad under fourteen fell from a
-cart and was killed, there was no deodand: as some opined, because the
-masses might be dispensed with, in the case of one presumed sinless
-from his tender age, and the proper end of deodands was to procure
-masses; but others urged it was "because he was not of discretion to
-look to himself." The further question--what possible difference this
-could make--was not raised; for even a mediæval lawyer's speculation
-must stop somewhere. But how if the slayer were a lad? A Cornish case,
-_temp._ 1302, supplies an answer. Jack of Burton, a boy of twelve, had
-a mind to draw the bow. He rigged up a target in a house, and shot
-thereat from the outside. One arrow missed the mark, and, glancing off
-a hook, transfixed a woman called Rose. Rose died forthwith, and Jack
-fled in horror. It was held that _le Hoke_ was a deodand, but that the
-boy, on account of his age, was no whit to blame, and (with a touch of
-kindliness) a proclamation was made far and wide that he might return
-in safety. In this connection one recalls the awkward misadventure of
-Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury, in the reign of James I., who, being
-out a-hunting, killed, by pure accident, Peter Hawkins, his keeper.
-He had many enemies, and all sorts of ecclesiastical and temporal
-penalties were threatened: at least, it was said, let all his goods be
-confiscate. But the King turned a deaf ear to these suggestions: he
-comforted the unlucky prelate with kindly words, and a full pardon,
-dated 26th September 1621, removed all possible danger from his
-reverend person.
-
-If a man met his death afloat, there was deodand or no deodand as the
-water was fresh or salt, for these rules had no force on the high
-seas or in tidal rivers: because, said some, "there were so many
-deaths at sea." "Nay," said others, "how forfeit the ocean?" "But at
-least," it was replied, "one could take the ship"----but here again
-speculation must stop. Although deodands first went to the Crown, and
-were properly applied to pious or charitable uses, yet they were often
-granted to lords of manors: so often, indeed, that one of the few
-references to them in English literature--a couplet in Samuel Butler's
-_Hudibras_--treats this as the general rule.
-
- "For love should, like a deodand,
- Still fall to the owner of the land."
-
-This owner was not seldom exacting, and his claim was met in
-characteristic English fashion. The coroner's jury returned the
-value of the deodand at next to nothing, _e.g._, "a horse, value
-three shillings," and the Court of "King's Bench" refused to disturb
-the finding. Hence one absurdity balanced another, and the doctrine
-was long defended. In 1820, Joseph Chitty, in his standard work on
-_Prerogatives_, maintains that "the forfeiture is rational so far as it
-strengthens the natural sensation of the mind at the sudden destruction
-of human life." But in later years these mediæval ghosts began to
-walk again to some purpose. In 1840 the London and Birmingham Railway
-Company was amerced in £2000 as a deodand! Railway directors were no
-doubt convinced that 9 and 10 Vic., c. 62, which in 1846 made an end
-of the whole business, came not a day too soon. Had the law of twenty
-years before that been restored, there might have been some warrant
-for stripping those same directors of all their property after each
-railway accident, and one shudders to think of the consequences had the
-coroner's jury found the plant used not _per infortunium_.
-
-One thing must be added, many held that the instruments of a murder,
-though forfeited to the Crown, were not, properly speaking, deodands,
-and they quoted as illustration the curious case of one Rempston,
-who forced his boat's crew to row under London Bridge _invitis corum
-dentibus_ in dangerous weather. He was thrown out and drowned, and the
-jury, it was said, brought in a verdict of _felo de se_, to save the
-boat from forfeiture. But the weight of authority was emphatically
-against this view.
-
-
-
-
-THE LAW OF THE FOREST
-
-
-"A stretch of land, thick planted with trees;" so you picture a
-forest to yourself, but old English law held otherwise. There were
-miles of woodland that were not forest at all, and acres of pasture
-that were. John Manwood, the Elizabethan lawyer, still our chief
-authority on the subject, defines it as "a certain territory of woody
-grounds and fruitful pastures, privileged for wild beasts and fowls
-of forest, chase, and warren, to rest and abide in under the safe
-protection of the king." Such a preserve was exactly delimited, and
-might contain villages, churches, and so forth, within its bounds,
-as the New Forest does to-day. The king had certain rights over all,
-yet it was mainly private property; nay, there might be spaces in it,
-but not of it,--within its Bounds, but not within its Regard, as the
-phrase ran,--and so exempt from its peculiar laws. Manwood gives a
-picturesque, though quite erroneous derivation of the term: it was _For
-Rest_ of the wild beasts; but a sounder etymology traces the word to
-_foris_ (= outside), for that it was outside the jurisdiction of the
-Common Law, and had codes, courts, and officers of its own. The whole
-business was for centuries alike insult and wrong to the Commons of
-England.
-
-Hunting was not merely the chief amusement of our early kings: it
-was a necessary pursuit for the keeping down of the wild beasts
-then a real danger to the fields and their cultivators. The Forest
-Charter of Canute the Dane (dated 1016) is a myth; but it is certain
-that, before the Conquest, the sovereign had a peculiar--howbeit, an
-undefined--property in the woodland. The Conqueror, who, according
-to the Saxon Chronicle, loved the tall deer as if he had been their
-father, devastated far and wide to make the New Forest; and he and his
-immediate successors punished hurt done to the deer with loss of life
-or limb. The Great Charter contained provisions against this odious
-abuse of power, and under Henry III. a special charter of the forest
-enacted that no man should lose life or limb for killing deer, at the
-same time that it disafforested (_i.e._, removed from the forest to
-which they had been improperly joined) vast tracts of country. After
-the New there was but one other forest made in England, that was the
-land round Hampton Court, afforested under Henry VIII. by Act of
-Parliament.
-
-An attempt to revive royal rights over the woodland hastened the fall
-of Charles the First, and then the Commonwealth gave the forest system
-its death-blow, though it was not till the time of George III. that the
-great mass of enactments was formally repealed. A Court of Swainmote
-lingers in the New Forest and elsewhere, and its officials, called
-Verderers, albeit shorn of their ancient power and splendour, do
-their quaint antics still; but by an odd, though happily not singular
-inversion, those old popular wrongs are now become popular privileges;
-Epping Forest, for instance, could never have become a public park
-but for the Crown rights, and these same rights over the woodlands
-throughout the country now yield an income which more than covers the
-cost of the whole Civil List. Had the Crown looked more sharply to its
-own, the profit to ourselves had been still vaster.
-
-The forest laws, however complex in detail, were all inspired by one
-consistent idea--the preservation, to wit, of the king's venison.
-Even under Edward I.'s comparatively humane rule the verderer held an
-inquest upon a deer found dead in the Regard, just as the coroner did
-upon a man's body, and the jury found how the creature came to its end.
-The very arrows gleaned there were entered in the verderer's role. The
-freeholder within that charmed ground might not fell his own timber
-without leave, lest he should spoil the _Cover_: nor could he turn out
-his goats to browse, for they would taint the pasture; whilst he must
-feed his sheep in moderation, else he committed the grievous offence of
-_surcharging_ the forest.
-
-The forest had a huge staff of officers. First was a multitude of
-subordinates; foresters--who, if they kept ale-houses in the Regard,
-and encouraged folk to drink therein, committed a special crime called
-_Scotale_--agistors, woodwards, keepers, verminers, sub-verminers, and
-what not. These haled trespassers before the Court of Attachments,
-which was held every forty days. In command of them were the verderers,
-constituting, with representatives from the forest townships, the Court
-of Swainmote, which met thrice a year for (_inter alia_) the trial of
-the more important offences. Judgment on its findings was given at
-the Court of Justice Seat, held but once in the three years, under
-the presidency of a Lord Chief Justice in Eyre of the Forest. There
-were but two--one for the north, the other for the south of the Trent;
-and inasmuch as this officer was commonly some great noble--"A man,"
-says my Lord Coke, with a touch of irony, "of greater dignity than of
-knowledge of the laws of the forest"--some skilled professional folk
-were joined with him in the commission. The last Court of Justice Seat
-was held in 1670 by the Earl of Oxford. It was a mere form: the last
-but one (in 1635) had created a fine pother by its exactions.
-
-Offences were either trespasses _in Vert_ or trespasses _in Venison_.
-The Vert (= green) was of course the cover; and the destruction
-thereof was called _Waste_, while _Assart_ was stubbling it up to make
-ploughland: and _Purpestre_ (a most grievous business) was building on
-or enclosing part of the forest. (As late as the reign of Charles I.,
-Sir Sampson Darnell was heavily fined for erecting a windmill on his
-own ground in Windsor Chase). Moreover, Vert might be _Over Vert_ or
-_Hault-Bois_, or it might be _Nether-Vert_ or _Sous-Bois_, according as
-it was underwood or not; and in either case it was _Special Vert_ if
-it bore fruit, such as pears, crabs, hips, and haws, whereon the deer
-might feed.
-
-Venison, as lawyers understood it, was composed of Beasts of Forest--to
-wit, the hart, the hind, the hare, the boar, and the wolf--and Beasts
-of Chase. A Chase, which was like a park, but was not enclosed, might
-be held by a subject; but every forest was likewise a chase and a
-warren, and the beasts of chase were the buck, the doe, the martern,
-and the roe. These were described with wondrous detail. The hart--"the
-most stately beast which goeth on the earth, having as it were a
-majesty both in its gait and countenance"--was in his first year a
-Calf, in his second a Broket, in his third a Spayad, in his fourth a
-Staggard, in his fifth a Stag, and in his sixth a Hart. If he escaped
-the pursuit of king or queen he became a Hart Royal, which no subject
-might molest.
-
-In 1194, Richard Coeur-de-Lion hunted a noble beast out of the forest
-of Sherwood into Barnsdale in Yorkshire, and there losing him, made
-proclamation "that no person should kill, hunt, or chase the said hart,
-but that he might safely return into the forest again." An animal thus
-honoured was called a Hart Royal Proclaimed, and in the 21st of King
-Henry VII., a man was indicted for taking so precious a life, but the
-case apparently went off for want of technical proof of proclamation.
-Your precise woodman talked of a Bevy of roes, a Richesse of marterns,
-a Lease of bucks. He said that a hart harboureth, whilst a buck
-lodgeth, and a hare was seated. He dislodged the buck, but he started
-the hare. He would tell you that the hart belloweth, the buck groaneth,
-the boar freameth; and whilst the hart had a Tail, the roe had a
-Single, the boar a Wreath, and the fox a Bush (not Brush be it noted)
-or Holy Water Sprinkle. Their amours (_e.g._ a fox went to clicketing),
-their young, their very excrements were dignified in a long array of
-special terms, the divisions and subdivisions of the deers' antlers
-being enough of themselves to gravel the tyro in woodcraft.
-
-The peace of those precious animals was elaborately safeguarded, and
-it was specially forbidden "to haunt the forest" during the _Fence
-Moneth_, which was fifteen days before and after Midsummer. Most
-forests were surrounded by Purlieus, that is, territory which had
-been disafforested. Officers called Rangers patrolled this debateable
-territory to drive back the errant deer, and whilst the Purlieu-man
-(namely, the freeholder therein) might hunt on his own lands, he must
-call off his dogs if the beast once touched the forest. And every three
-years there was a special Drift of the forest, which was a sort of
-census of the venison. A man taken _With the Manner_ (Main Ouverte),
-that is, in the act of doing for the deer, was attached without bail.
-The offender might thus be caught red-handed in four ways:--(1)
-in _Dog-Draw_ he was chasing a wounded beast with hounds; (2) in
-_Stable-Stand_ he was drawing his bow in ambush; (3) in _Back-Bare_ he
-was carrying off his quarry; (4) in _Bloudy-Hand_ he bore the red marks
-of his spoil. Divers statutes put a yet keener edge upon the common
-law, as that under Henry VII., whereby hunting in the forest at night
-with painted vizards was made a felony.
-
-And what of the dogs? The forest freeholders might keep mastiffs for
-the protection of home and homestead; but a Court of Regards was held
-every three years for their Lawing or Expeditation. Thereat your
-mastiff was made to place one of his paws upon a billet of wood, "then
-one with a mallet, setting a chisel of three inches broad upon the
-three claws of his forefoot, at one blow doth smite them clean off."
-Other dogs of any size were summarily banished the precincts.
-
-Royalty was ever jealous of these rights. A Fee-buck and a Fee-doe were
-allotted to every verderer yearly (but these were but wages in kind);
-and every lord of Parliament going or returning through the forest, on
-summons from the king, might take one or two beasts, but if no forester
-was at hand, he must sound his horn, lest the kill might seem done in
-secret. But all the king's horses and all the king's men could not
-quench English love of sport. Robin Hood and his merry band are but
-the glorified types of a very multitude who chased the deer night and
-day, for the forest stretched mile after mile over hill and dale, and
-the tall deer were fair to look on, and the taste of their flesh was as
-sweet to the wanderer and the outlaw as to the noble or the monarch;
-and the law, albeit cruel, was weak, and a touch of danger but gave
-zest to the pursuit. To take a later instance, was not Shakespeare
-himself the most illustrious of poachers? Not on such rovers but
-on the poor hard-working folk within the Regard did the forest laws
-press with cruel weight, and yet old Manwood highly extols their sweet
-reasonableness--"The king," he says, "wearied with his anxious care for
-the weal of his subjects, is given by law these forests that he may
-delight his eye at sight of the vert, and mind and body by the hunting
-of the wild beasts," and so he finds it in his heart to regret that in
-his day the forests were somewhat diminished. And since the sovereign's
-good is now the peoples' good, we may agree with him, though not for
-the same reason.
-
-
-
-
-PAR NOBILE FRATRUM
-
-JOHN DOE AND RICHARD ROE
-
-
-Old English law being full of fictions, had pressing need ever and anon
-of imaginary characters to play imaginary parts. Sometimes a name was
-picked at random from the street, and Smith, you hear without surprise,
-was in great request, or, as those shadows came and went in couples,
-you find Richard Smith as often as not paired with William Styles.
-But your ancient scribe lusted after quaintness. He loved a jingle,
-so names like John Den and Richard Fen--rare in actual life--peopled
-his parchment, and strove for mastery in his mock combats. But his
-prime favourites were Doe and Roe, nor would he raise Den or Fen or
-any other ghost, excepting he had need of more than two. Here is a
-simple instance of their use. In early times a man who commenced an
-action had to give surety that he would go on with it; nowadays, if
-he discontinue, he must pay the costs of the other side, but costs,
-incredible as it may sound, were not always the necessary shadow, or
-perhaps the substance, of law; and hence the need for the pledge. Under
-Edward III. the practice went out of use, but the form of it, as legal
-forms are apt to do, lingered on for centuries in this style:--
-
- _Pledges of Prosecution_ { JOHN DOE.
- { RICHARD ROE.
-
-In the old Action of Ejectment the pair were most active. So strange
-were their gambols that even the lay world was impressed. In the early
-years of Victoria John and Richard were common butts of popular satire.
-Nothing seemed more gratuitous, more idly superfluous; but, turn to
-their history, and you find how important and how serviceable were the
-parts they once played.
-
-One must begin far back. In early feudal times the cultivator of
-another's land was either a serf or a person of no importance, holding
-at his lord's will. The tenant's position improved with the times,
-leases were granted, and if their conditions were broken, a Writ of
-Covenant, as the form of action was called, secured him in possession,
-and gave him damages for his wrongs. But this action lay, as the
-technical term is, between the original parties alone; so that if he
-were turned out by a complete stranger, or by a person claiming through
-another grant of the same landlord, his remedy was merely pecuniary. In
-the time of Henry III. a writ was invented giving him full protection
-against anyone interfering under colour of another lease from his lord:
-but the case of an Ouster (or dispossession) by an utter stranger
-was not adequately provided for until the beginning of Edward III.'s
-reign, when the writ of _Ejectio Firmæ_, or ejectment, was adapted
-from the proceeding in trespass. It called upon the wrong-doer of
-every species to show why, "with force and arms," he had entered on
-and taken possession of the plaintiff's land. But, again, the result
-was only money damages: so that he was driven for relief to the
-equitable jurisdiction of the Chancellor, who, by injunctions and so
-forth, secured him in, or restored him to, possession of the very land
-itself. Presently the Common Law Courts took it ill that so much of
-their legitimate business should go elsewhere; and, at the end of the
-fifteenth century, they allowed the term itself, as well as damages for
-the Ouster, to be recovered under a Writ of Ejectment, and this remedy
-was held proper against every species of wrong-doer.
-
-And if, not the tenant, but the landlord himself, were deprived of his
-property? or, if anyone not in possession claimed a piece of land as
-his freehold? These forms of procedure were not available, since they
-were personal actions, and a claimant to the freehold must proceed
-by a real action. These last were in early times the most important
-of all. But their forms were numerous and varied (the assizes of
-_morte d'ancestor_ and _novel disseisin_, as they were called in old
-law French, were two of the best known), and their cumbersome and
-complicated technicalities were cause of much expense, irritation,
-and delay. At last it occurred to some ingenious, though forgotten,
-jurist so to twist this Writ of Ejectment, which had all the last
-improvements, as to make it available in an action for the recovery
-of the freehold. That was done in this way. A. was (let us suppose)
-the legal and rightful owner of an estate occupied in fact by B.;
-he entered on the land with C., to whom he, then and there, signed,
-sealed, and delivered a lease for the property in question; to them
-so engaged entered B., attracted by their manoeuvring, and speedily
-kicked both into the boundary ditch. Here were all the materials
-for the action of ejectment, since C. might truly declare himself
-dispossessed _vi et armis_ by B. from land whereof he held a lease from
-A. In this action the main point evidently was: Had A. a right to
-grant C. the lease? In other words, was A. the real owner of the land?
-If the jury said "Yes," then judgment for possession followed for C.,
-who, being merely the nominee of A., forthwith passed the property over
-to him. Improvements were speedily suggested. Actual ejection was like
-to prove unpleasant, so A. and C., instead of ostentatiously soliciting
-B.'s attention, took with them a confederate D., who, in a friendly
-and affable manner, performed the function of a chucker-out, and this
-casual ejector (as they named him) was made nominal defendant in the
-action wherein C. was nominal plaintiff. Lest B. should be condemned
-unheard, it was provided that the casual ejector must give him notice
-of the proceedings, whereupon he was let in to defend in place of D.
-This device was a brilliant practical success. Real actions pure and
-simple fell speedily into disuse, though it was not till 1833 that,
-with a few exceptions further tampered with in 1860, they were legally
-abolished.
-
-The Commonwealth was a time of legal as well as political change.
-The Lord Protector had, with quaint emphasis, described the Court of
-Chancery as "an ungodly jumble," and Rolle, his Lord Chief Justice
-of the Upper Bench, before and since known as the King's Bench, laid
-violent hands on the action of ejectment. "What," urged he in effect,
-"was the use of actual entry, lease and ouster? Let all be held as
-done: so that the Court may apply itself at once to the real question
-at issue." Finally, the action was in name _Doe_ against _Roe_, but
-the writ as a mere form was suppressed, and the first step was the
-declaration and notice to appear, both served on the real defendant or
-his tenant. The declaration stated that the land in question had been
-demised by A. (the real claimant) to John Doe; but that Richard Roe had
-entered thereon by force and arms and ejected him, "to the great damage
-of the said John Doe, and against the peace of our Lord the now King;"
-and that therefore he brought this action. To this there was appended
-a letter, signed "your loving friend Richard Roe," addressed to B.,
-the real defendant, and informing him that the sender, hearing that he
-claimed the land, must now tell him that he (Richard), being sued "as
-a casual ejector only, and having no title to the same," he advised
-him (B.) to enter appearance as defendant, "otherwise I shall suffer
-judgment therein to be entered against me by default, and you will be
-turned out of possession." Now, to succeed in his action, the plaintiff
-must clearly prove four things--Title, Lease, Entry, and Ouster; and
-the three last he could not do, since they never happened. This little
-difficulty was got over by a consent rule: the Courts allowed B. to
-take Richard Roe's place as defendant, only on condition that he would
-confess those three things to have happened which never did happen:
-whereupon the real question of title alone remained.
-
-So strangely had this action varied from its first use--which was to
-recover damages for wrongful possession of land--that in the result
-these were nominally estimated at a shilling; and if A. really wished
-to make B. disgorge the spoils of possession, he sued him again for
-Mesne Profits. Although the action was nominally "_Doe_ against _Roe_,"
-the cases are usually cited as "_Doe on the demise of A._" (the real
-plaintiff) "against B." (the real defendant), and whilst John and
-Richard were the favourite styles, we have occasionally "_Good Title_
-against _Bad Title_": a comically impudent begging of the question
-at issue. If the outside public mocked these venerable figures, _par
-nobile fratrum_, the suitor did so at his peril. A certain Unitt
-(_temp._ George I.), being served with a copy of a Declaration in
-Ejectment, "pronounced contemptuous words on the delivery of it," and
-the judges in solemn conclave held that he was in contempt, and was
-deserving of punishment therefor. So the masque of shadows went on
-till 1852, when the Common Law Procedure Act removed an obstacle which
-lawyers had walked round for centuries, and consigned John Doe and
-Richard Roe to that limbo where so much legal rubbish lies buried under
-ever-thickening clouds of dust.
-
-
-
-
-SANCTUARY
-
-
-Your old-world lawyer was an ardent, if uncritical, antiquary. He
-began at the beginning, and where facts ran short his fancy filled
-up the blank. In discussing Sanctuary he started with the biblical
-cities of refuge. He had something to say of Romulus and the foundation
-of Rome. Geoffrey of Monmouth supplied him with the name of a
-sovereign--Dunwallo Molmutius to wit--who flourished in Druidical
-Britain (B.C. 500 it was said), under whom cities and even
-ploughs were arks of refuge for the despairing fugitive. It might have
-been objected that the ancient Britons had neither ploughs nor cities;
-but such criticism was not yet in the land. We touch firmer ground in
-the centuries immediately preceding the Conquest. In early English
-legislation churches safeguarded the criminal from hasty vengeance,
-and so allowed time to settle the money compensation payable for
-his offence. Sanctuary was among the privileges that the Conqueror
-conferred upon his foundation of Battle Abbey--one of many cases
-wherefrom the Norman lawyers built up a system for mediæval England.
-
-That system was not always consistent or clear, but its main outlines
-were as follows:--sanctuaries were of two kinds--general, as all
-churches and churchyards; special, as St Martin's Le Grand and
-Westminster. No doubt these last had originally also a religious
-sanction. Such places were twice consecrate: Pope and King, the Canon
-and the Common Law united in their favour. They protected felons, but
-not those guilty of sacrilege or (some held) of treason. They were not
-properly for debtors, whose reception was nevertheless justified by
-an ingenious quibble. Imprisonment might endanger life, and therefore
-(so the learned argued) the runaway debtor must be received. A man
-took sanctuary thus--Having stricken (let us say) his fellow, he fled
-to the cathedral and knocked (with how trembling a hand!) at the door
-of the galilee. Over the north porch were two chambers where watchers
-abode night and day. On the instant the door swung open, and had scarce
-closed behind the fugitive when the galilee bell proclaimed to the
-town that another life was safe from them that hunted. Then the prior
-assigned him a gown of black cloth marked on the left shoulder with
-the yellow cross of St Cuthbert, and therewith a narrow space where
-he might lie secure of life, though ill at ease. So it was at Durham.
-At Westminster the sanctuary man bore the cross keys for a badge, and
-walked in doleful state before the abbot at procession times; and there
-were, no doubt, countless variations. A phrase of the time reveals how
-close the watch was now and again. Under Edward II. it was complained
-that the sanctuary man might not remove so much as a step beyond
-the precincts, _causâ superflui deponendi_, without being seized and
-haled to prison. He was fed and lodged in some rough sort for forty
-days, within which time he must confess his crime before the coroner
-at the churchyard gate, and so constitute himself the king's felon.
-Then he swore to abjure the realm. The coroner assigned him a port of
-embarcation (chosen by himself), whither he must hasten with bare head,
-carrying in his hand a cross, not departing, save in direst need, from
-the King's highway. He might tarry on the shore but a single ebb and
-flow of the tide, unless it were impossible to come by a ship, in which
-case he must wade up to his knees in the sea every day. He was thus
-protected for another forty days, when, if he could not find passage,
-he returned whence he came, to try his luck elsewhere.
-
-He who refused to confess and abjure was not driven forth, but if,
-after much spiritual admonition, he still refused to conform, he had
-neither meat nor drink given him, and so was ended, if not mended.
-A man unjustly deprived of sanctuary could plead the right before
-his judges. It was a declinatory plea, and must be urged before he
-answered as to his guilt or innocence; it availed him nothing to do
-so after, for he was strung up forthwith. This system, however harsh,
-had two very plain advantages. It was a short and easy method with a
-rascal, and it powerfully made for scientific accuracy in pleading. If
-a fugitive were caught and condemned ere he "took Westminster," as the
-town phrase ran, it was no advantage for him to escape on the way to
-execution, inasmuch as he was promptly haled forth to the gallows. A
-curious case in the eighth of Edward II. perplexed the ancient student.
-A woman was condemned to death, but a jury of matrons had no doubt
-as to her condition, and she was reprieved. She escaped to sanctuary
-before the arrival of the hangman's cart, and when the gaoler dragged
-her out, the judges bade him put her back again, whereat the learned
-shook their heads, opining that hard cases make bad law, and the jade
-should have swung like other folk.
-
-On the whole the privilege was strictly respected. For instance, the
-King's justices were wont to hold session in St Martin's Gate. They
-sat on the very border. The accused were placed on the other side of
-the street; a channel ran between them and their judges, and if they
-once got across _that_ they claimed sanctuary, and all proceedings
-against them were annulled. And one sees the reason why Perkin Warbeck
-took such care "to squint one eye upon the crown and the other on the
-Sanctuary" (as Bacon curiously phrases it); yet the great case of
-Beckett is there to show that nothing was absolutely sacred in these
-violent years. Nor does it stand alone. In 1191, Jeffrey, Archbishop
-of York, and son of Henry II., was seized at the altar of St Martin's
-Priory, Dover; and dragged, episcopal robes and all, through dirty
-streets to the Castle: this, too, by order of William Longchamp, Bishop
-of Ely, and Papal Legate. In 1378, Archbishop Sudbury complained in
-Parliament that one Robert Hawley had been slain at the high altar even
-while the priest was saying a mass. It was rumoured indeed that one
-Thurstian, a Knight, chasing a sanctuary man with drawn sword, was of a
-sudden stricken with grievous ailments. But this and other like stories
-did not deter the citizens of London (_circa_ 1349) from assembling
-at supper time in a great crowd, and dragging forth a soldier who had
-escaped on the way from Newgate to Guildhall, where he was being taken
-for trial. In another case (_temp._ Henry VI.), where a youth had taken
-sanctuary after having foully slain a kind mistress, the good women
-about St Martin's broke in and despatched him with their distaffs. Of
-those who took sanctuary to good purpose the most famous was Elizabeth,
-widow of Edward IV., who, in 1471, registered herself a sanctuary
-woman in Westminster, and there sat, in Sir Thomas More's phrase, "Alow
-in the rushes." But you have read the tragic story in Shakespeare. And
-in a later age "beastly Skelton" (as Pope will have him), from that
-same Westminster safely lampooned the mighty Wolsey, though for that he
-needs must live and die there.
-
-To catalogue the evils of the sanctuary system were to show lack of
-historical sympathy, nay, even of humour. The former days were not as
-these; it had its place with the shrine and the pilgrimage, the knight
-errant, and the trial by ordeal in the strange economy of a vanished
-world. As the times grew modern its practical inconvenience was felt
-for the first time. Yet the occasion of the first assault on the
-privilege of sanctuary was one where the benefits were conspicuous,
-and the assailant had the worst of motives. It was the case just noted
-of Edward IV.'s widow; she had the young Duke of York as yet safe
-with her. Her enemies were at a loss for the moment, and Buckingham,
-then the sworn ally of Richard of Gloucester, took occasion in the
-Privy Council to attack her place of refuge. "There were two chief
-plague-spots in London," he snarled: "one at the elbows of the city
-(Westminster), the other in the very bowels thereof (St Martin's le
-Grand). These places were the refuge of theeves, murtherers, and
-malitious, heynous traytors! nay," he added, "men's wives ran hither
-with their husbands' plate, and say they dare not abide their husbands
-for beating," with more to the same effect. Had not Elizabeth yielded,
-Westminster might have witnessed a violation as affecting as that of
-Canterbury.
-
-Under Henry VIII. the old order was broken up, and sanctuary law,
-like much else, was changed and amended again and again. First, all
-special places save Wells, Westminster, and six others, lost the
-privilege. Divers classes of criminals --as traitors, and pirates
-(and afterwards) Egyptians--were formally rendered incapable of its
-enjoyment. Before the sanctuary man abjured the realm he was burned
-on the crown of the thumb "with the signe of an A," and if he did not
-depart on the instant, he had no further protection. But it occurred to
-over-anxious legislators that such a fugitive might carry beyond seas
-precious hints of the mysteries of trade or politics, or that, making
-as if for the nearest port, he might but proceed to infest another
-place. So he was ordered to abjure the liberty of the realm, but not
-the realm itself; and being branded, was confined under a governor in
-one or other of the sanctuaries. Whenever he ventured forth--as he
-might in the daytime--he must wear the prescribed badge of the refuge.
-He dare carry no weapon save a meat-knife, and that but at meal-times.
-He must likewise answer to the daily roll-call. If he committed another
-felony--and crimes done _sub spe redeundi_ had been a sore grievance
-of late--he was to lose his rights. The governor was empowered to
-hold courts for debt and minor offences within his bounds. And so "the
-sanctuary person abjured," as the Tudor lawyers phrased him, spent the
-last days of his evil life. I need not dwell on minor tinkerings of the
-system under Henry's children. In 1623 the Statute 21 James I., c. 28,
-s. 7 made a legal end of the right of sanctuary.
-
-The last of our story is not yet. Certain places still assumed the
-right of giving shelter against civil process. When the bailiffs
-invaded the liberty, the whole population forthwith set on, and
-pommelled them so lustily that they were fortunate if they escaped
-sound in limb. The precincts of Whitefriars and the Savoy were
-the worst places in London. The first, renowned in slang, nay, in
-literature, as Alsatia, because (some explained) it neighboured the
-Temple on the East, as Alsace did France, was a base and villainous
-Bohemia. Ram Alley (now Mitre Court), a local Lombard Street, Salisbury
-Court (now Salisbury Square) were its chief ways, though probably
-all between Fleet Street and the river, which was not the Temple,
-held of this lawless republic. A bully or bravo, or squire of Alsatia
-was a cant name for a penniless and violent fellow of the time. He is
-pictured by Otway in his _Soldier's Fortune_ with flopping hat pinned
-up on one side, with a tawdry weather-beaten peruke, dirty linen, and
-a long scandalous iron sword jangling at his heels. The sheriff with
-the _posse comitatus_ did on occasion raid Alsatia, but his prey, if
-too weak to fight, had ever timely warning to escape by land or water
-to some other like burrow. _The Fortunes of Nigel_ tells as much of the
-place as the general cares to know, and there is much curious matter
-mined out by the zealous antiquary as to other like places of refuge
-in the capital. Thus Fullwood's, sometime Fuller's Rents, was related
-to Gray's Inn as Alsatia to the Temple. In 1673 the gentlemen of that
-ancient house so far forgot themselves as to engage in "pumping"
-some bailiffs who attempted to take goods from out the Rents upon an
-execution. "They were charged with a body of thirty lusty bailiffs,"
-and a "strong ryot" ensued. Possibly they recollected that their most
-illustrious fellow-member, "broad-browed Verulam," had taken refuge
-there some sixty years before, a circumstance which gave my Lord Coke
-occasion to "gall the kibe"--as indeed he never lost any chance to
-do--of his great contemporary. Then there was the mint in Southwark,
-whereto an ex-poet laureate, "poor Nahum Tate," as Dr. Johnson calls
-him, was driven by extreme poverty. Pope's cruel satire pictures it
-half Grub Street half Bedlam, the last refuge of the hack and the
-poetaster. The Clink and Deadman's place are now forgotten, whilst
-Baldwin's Gardens and the Minories have a more commonplace reputation.
-
-About a century after James's Act, Parliament again interfered, and
-professed to strip the "pretended privileged places" of every shred
-of exemption, but it required two other statutes, the 9 Geo. I. c.
-28, 1722, and the 11 Geo. I. c. 22, 1724, to make the law's process as
-effectual there as elsewhere.
-
-
-
-
-TRIAL BY ORDEAL
-
-
-Before the Conquest, and for long after, local justice in England was
-administered by two courts--that of the Hundred and that of the Shire.
-The first nominally consisted of the freeholders of the district,
-but the real business was done by a Committee of Twelve. The second
-was made up of the chief men of the district, and representatives
-from each township; but here, again, the work was left to a select
-few. If a man were charged with (say) theft before either court, he
-was tried in a fashion vastly different from that obtaining to-day.
-The complainant was sworn on the holy relics: "By the Lord I accuse
-not this man either for hatred, or for envy, or for unlawful lust of
-gain." This solemn accusation made out a _primâ facie_ case against
-the suspect, who instantly rebutted oath with oath. "By the Lord I
-am guiltless, both in deed and in counsel of this charge." Then he
-produced twelve compurgators, who swore by the Lord, "The oath is clean
-and unperjured which this man hath sworn"; then the prisoner went free.
-These compurgators were witnesses to character. Their testimony had
-no reference to the particular facts of the case; they simply alleged
-their belief in accused's innocence, but sometimes their oath "burst"
-(as the curious technical phrase ran), that is, he could not find
-compurgators, or those he produced said little good of him; or he was
-a stranger of whom nothing was known; or a Welshman whose veracity has
-never been an article of faith; or the accused was caught with his
-booty; or was a woman; or the charge was peculiarly odious, as treason,
-or witchcraft; then in all these cases there was an appeal to the
-_Judicium Dei_, the Creator was called upon to prove beyond dispute the
-guilt or innocence of the accused.
-
-Trial by Ordeal was more ancient than the Church itself. There are
-traces of it in the Old Testament; it is discussed in great detail in
-the Laws of Manu; a famous passage in the _Antigone_ (verses 264-267)
-reveals it as well known to the Greeks, and before Augustine came, or
-St Columba preached, it prevailed in some form or other in Britain.
-Yet the higher ecclesiastical powers continually thundered against it,
-and finally brought about its disuse. There were several varieties,
-but many forms were common to all. First, there was the ordeal of
-cold water, chiefly reserved for the baser fellow. As a preliminary
-the accused submitted to a fast of three days, during which he was
-watched by a priest, then he was taken to church to hear Mass; and was
-adjured by Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, by the gospels and relics of
-the saints, by everything held most sacred, not to partake of communion
-if he were guilty. Next came the _adjuratio aquæ_, wherein the water
-was enjoined to cast him forth if he were guilty, but to receive him
-into its depths if innocent. And now, having been stripped, he kissed
-the Book and the Cross, was sprinkled with holy water and was cast in,
-to float if he were guilty, to sink if he were not. But there was the
-rub--how about death by suffocation? Sir James Stephen suggests that
-it was all a mode of happy despatch! Or (one fancies) it might be an
-elementary form of the famous verdict "not guilty, but don't do it
-again," with the chance of doing it again effectually provided against.
-On the other hand, a recipe for immersion in a thirteenth century MS.
-of the Monastery of Becca reduces the proceedings to the level of
-farce. The hands of the accused were tied, and a rope was put round his
-waist; "and let a knot be made in the rope as high up as the longest
-hair of the man's head will reach, and then in this way let him be
-gently lowered into the water; and if he sinks down to the knot, let
-him be pulled out as innocent; if not, let him be adjudged guilty." How
-_not_ to sink under such conditions? The practice of testing witches
-by throwing them, securely tied, into the nearest pond was clearly a
-survival of this form of ordeal.
-
-In the ordeal by hot water the accused, plunging his hand to the wrist
-in the boiling fluid, brought forth a stone suspended therein by a
-cord. (This was the Single Ordeal, and it became the Triple when the
-plunge was up to the elbow.) The arm was done up in bandages not to
-be removed till after three days; if the scald had healed the man was
-innocent, if it still festered he was guilty. In the ordeal by hot
-iron, a piece of red-hot metal was carried a distance of nine feet;
-it was then dropped and the hand was bandaged as already set forth. A
-knight had to thrust his fist into a glowing gauntlet; another form
-was a walk with naked feet over a sequence of red-hot ploughshares. We
-have a picturesque circumstantial and absolutely untrustworthy monkish
-account of how Emma, mother of Edward the Confessor, being suspected
-of an all too intimate acquaintance with Alwyn, Bishop of Winchester,
-underwent this trial. She took nine steps for herself and five for the
-Bishop, fixing her eyes the while on heaven. "When shall we reach these
-ploughshares?" queried she. How agreeable a surprise to find her little
-promenade already past and done with! No need to swathe _her_ feet, the
-red-hot iron had marked them not at all!
-
-The last mode was the _Corsnæd_, or Cursed Morsel--a piece of
-barley-bread (or cheese), one ounce in weight. This "Creature of
-Sanctified Bread" was adjured, in terms terrible enough to make the
-sinner quake, to stick in the guilty throat, and cause the guilty jaws
-to be clenched and locked up. If in spite of all it went softly down,
-who dared to refuse belief in the man's innocence? It was chiefly
-for the clergy, and from every point of view must have been the most
-agreeable of the three, though a legend as untrustworthy as that of
-Emma ascribes to it the death of Earl Godwin, father of Harold. As he
-sat at meat with Edward the Confessor, the king brought up an old
-scandal about his brother's murder, "May God cause this morsel to choke
-me," passionately exclaimed the earl, "if I am guilty of the crime!"
-Edward blessed the bread; Godwin made an effort to swallow, choked and
-died. "Take away that dog," said the monarch in what would seem an
-outburst of savage glee. This was on April 15th, 1053, thirteen years
-before the Conquest. Godwin in truth died of a fit. It soon was the
-policy of the monkish chroniclers to write down the national party of
-which he had been the head, a fact which explains the fable were it
-worth serious examination. More interesting to note the survival of
-the rite in the still current rustic formula, "May this bit choke me
-if I lie!" If the ordeal proved a man guilty, the punishment was fine,
-death or outlawry, but even if he escaped, the Assize of Clarendon
-(1164) ordered that, in certain cases, he should abjure the realm. By
-that time compurgation was gone; in 1215 the Lateran Council issued a
-solemn decree against Trial by Ordeal; and soon after it had vanished
-from English law. There is a curious reference to it in the State
-Trials as late as 1679. John Govan, a Jesuit priest, was indicted in
-that year at the Old Bailey for an alleged share in the Popish Plot.
-With some hesitation he claimed the right of Trial by Ordeal as an
-ecclesiastical privilege of a thousand years' standing, but Scroggs and
-North peremptorily refused to listen to his plea. "We have no such law
-now," said the latter. Sir James Stephen assures us that the formula,
-"By God and by my country," wherein, till 1827, a prisoner must answer
-the question how he would be tried, sets forth a memory of it.
-
-Of the customs akin to Trial by Ordeal only one can find mention here.
-It was held that if the murderer touched, nay, even approached, the
-body of his victim, the wounds gushed forth blood, thus in _Richard the
-Third_, "dead Henry's wounds" are seen "to open their congealed mouths
-and bleed afresh" as Gloucester draws near the bier. And according to
-one of the picturesque legends of English history, when Richard the
-Lion-Heart encountered at Fontevrault his father's body, the blood
-gushed from the nostrils of the dead king, a proceeding which, as
-Richard's offence was at the worst but unkindness, showed a somewhat
-excessive sensibility on the part of the royal clay. The oddest and
-latest case of all is from Scotland. In 1688 Philip Stanfield was
-tried for parricide at Edinburgh; one count of the indictment stated
-how his father's body had bled at his sacrilegious touch. The Lord
-Advocate, Sir George Mackenzie of Rosehaugh, the "Bluidy Mackenzie"
-of covenanting legend and tradition, conducted the prosecution, and
-philosophic and cultured jurist as he was, he yet dwelt with much
-emphasis on the portentous sign. There was no lack of more satisfactory
-if more commonplace evidence, and young Stanfield assuredly merited the
-doom in the end meted out to him.
-
-
-
-
-WAGER OF BATTLE
-
-
-Judicial combat is a fascinating yet perplexing subject, having many
-side-issues whereupon the writer must sternly refrain. The case
-of David and Goliath was gravely urged (A.D. 867) as a
-precedent to Pope Nicholas I., and by him disdainfully put aside. The
-thing itself was unknown in Roman law, though the old legend of the
-Horatii and Curatii was part of its lore. But it was of the essence
-of chivalry, and the duel and the prize-fight were its legitimate
-offspring. "Where the hazel grew," so Mr George Nelson, our chief
-modern authority, picturesquely defines its region, but our attention
-here must be limited to England. That it was _not_ with us before
-the Conquest moves Bishop Stubbs to something of the scholar's mild
-amazement. The Normans, it seems clear, brought it with them from
-their continental home. A native accused of a serious crime by one of
-the invaders was tried by ordeal of battle, but a Norman had choice of
-the oath as well, and it was also used to decide which of the claimants
-should have a disputed piece of land. After the legal reforms of Henry
-II., it became an alternative proceeding in a limited class of actions.
-These were the Writ of Right (the most solemn method of trying title
-to land), accusations of murder, and treason. It had place only in
-appeals, in actions, that is to say, brought not in the king's name,
-but by an interested subject here called the Appellor, against whom
-the accused or Appellee might offer to prove his innocence by his
-body. The Appellor must accept the challenge unless he were maimed by
-age or wound. Likewise he could "Oust the Battle" (_i.e._ prove this
-mode of trial improper) if the accused were caught red-handed. The
-parties exchanged gloves, and gave pledges or wads (_vadiare bellum_);
-whence came Wager of Battle, afterwards the technical term for the
-whole process. In civil cases, if the litigants came to terms, the
-judge exacted a fine, called the Concord, while he who fought and lost
-must pay the mulct of Recusancy. In criminal matters he who resisted
-not till the stars shone forth was branded as Recreant or Craven and
-was forthwith strung up, and all his goods were declared forfeit. The
-Charters of Exemption purchased from overlord or king show how hateful
-the system was to the old English citizen. Henry I. enacted for a
-consideration that no Londoner should do battle, and in due course the
-men of Winchester, Lincoln, and Northampton obtained the like privilege.
-
-The story of Leicester is worth the telling. In the time of Henry I.
-Earl Robert of Mellant ruled the town. It chanced that two burghers,
-Nicholas and Jeffrey, waged battle on a plea of land. For nine long
-hours they mauled each other with varying fortune, when one of them
-took to flight, and staggered, all unwitting, on the edge of a pit.
-The other saw his danger, and remembered that they twain were kinsmen.
-"'Ware o' the pit," he shouted; "turn back, lest thou fall therein."
-The spectators so lustily roared their approval, that the Earl heard it
-in his castle, and he, after due enquiry, granted that in time coming
-twenty-four jurors of Leicester should determine all civic disputes.
-One strange product of Trial by Combat was the Approver: a rascal who
-turned king's evidence, and fought with his late companions. Sometimes
-he accused other malefactors, and if he came off victor in five
-combats he was released, and banished the country. This system fell
-into gross abuse, for the Approver, greedy of freedom or hush-money,
-appealed honest men right and left. In the chronicle of William Gregory
-the Skinner (1456) we have an account of a duel fought by one Thomas
-Whitehorne, a criminal, caught in the New Forest, and lodged in prison
-at Winchester, where he remained for about three years, fighting ever
-and anon. "And that fals and untrewe peler (= Appelar) hadde of the
-Kynge every day 1d. ob." At last a proposed victim retorted the lie
-in his throat, and said that "he wold prove hyt with hys handys and
-spende hys lyfe and blode a-pone hys fals body." Then the judge "fulle
-curtesly informed this sympylle man" that "he and the peler moste be
-clothyed all in whyte schepys leter." Also each must have a stave of
-green ash, three feet long, the point thereof "a horne of yryn i-made
-lyke unto a rammy's horne;" and if these ash-plants broke, then they
-"moste fight with hyr handys, fystys, naylys, tethe, fete, and leggys."
-Moreover, they must strive fasting on the "moste sory and wrechyd
-greene about the town;" but "Huyt ys to schamfulle to reherse alle
-the condycyons of thys foule conflycte." And we must follow Gregory's
-precept rather than his example.
-
-The Appellee, asking for inquiry as to his character, was reported
-"a fyscher and tayler of crafte," and therewith the "trewyste laborer
-and the moste gentellyte." The peler, with brazen insolence, offered
-_his_ character for inspection. There was much dubiety as to where and
-how he had lived when at large, but "Hange uppe Thome Whythorne" was
-the response of every reference he tendered. At last the day came. The
-Appellee, as became an innocent man, told his beads, and prayed long
-and earnestly, and wept full sore, and all present prayed for and with
-him. The "fals peler" scoffed thereat. "Thou fals trayter," yelled
-he; "why arte thou soo longe in fals bytter beleve?" The defendant's
-sole answer was so lusty a thwack that his staff flew all to pieces.
-Thereupon the peler's stave was taken away from _him_; "ande thenn they
-wente togedyr by the neckys," so using teeth and fist, "that the lethyr
-of clothing and fleshe was alle to rente in many placys of hyr bodys."
-It fared ill at first with the "meke innocent." His opponent had him
-down on the ground, and near choked the life out of him. But presently
-the meek one got up on his knees, and (the combat not being under
-Queensberry rules), "toke that fals peler by the nose with hys tethe,
-and put hys thombe in hys yee, that the peler cryde owte ande prayde
-hym of marcy, for he was fals unto God and unto hym." The peler's
-subsequent record is of the briefest, but, one is thankful to add, of
-the most edifying description. "And thenn he was confessyd and hanggyd,
-of whose soule God ha' marcy." Amen. "_Victus est et susp_," so for
-epitaph wrote the official scribe against his name. And the exchequer
-parchments knew him and his "_1d. ob. per diem_" no more.
-
-The Champion, now but the shadow of a name, was a nobler offshoot of
-the system. Originally a witness, he was finally indispensable in civil
-cases wherein--for a legal reason not here to be discussed--the parties
-themselves must not engage. He was the proper advocate for churchmen,
-for women, and for the Crown; and his last appearance for royalty was
-in 1820, at the coronation of George IV. The Dymocks have held the
-manor of Scrivelsby in Lincolnshire for centuries by this tenure, and
-possibly their representative claimed a part in the pageant on the
-two subsequent occasions, but to have him ride up Westminster Hall in
-full armour and clang his gauntlet on the floor (as he did of old)
-would have savoured too much of Drury Lane pantomime for the taste of
-a cynical age. The Champion's dress and bearing were minutely ordered.
-His head (_e.g._) was shaven, but whether this was to give no hold to
-his foe, or to fulfil some old superstition, is still in debate among
-the learned. In the end he was usually a hireling, which fact may
-very well have accentuated the absurdity of the system. At any rate,
-towards the close of the thirteenth century it was only kept alive by
-the approvers. Then Chivalry came with its Treason Duel, and by the
-time of Richard II. the Chivalry Court was in full swing. Its forms,
-mainly imported, were after this wise. Upon the accusation and the
-exchange of gloves, time and place were assigned for the duel, and here
-the lists were set and staked. There were two gates, and hard by each
-a pavilion--one eastward for the appellant, and the other westward for
-the defendant. To the south was the judge's seat; and right and left
-were benches for the high-born, while the commons were made free of
-the unenclosed field. Near the judge an altar was decked with relics;
-and not far off there stood a gibbet and a scaffold. Men-at-arms were
-stationed between the palisades. There were heralds in gay tabards, a
-priest in full canonicals stood at the altar--but it were wearisome to
-enumerate all the officials.
-
-The trial was held not less than forty days after the challenge; and
-the time being come, the heralds demanded silence; and the appellant
-was summoned three times by voice and by sound of trumpet. As he
-marched forward he was addressed by the Constable, "Who art thou, and
-wherefore comest thou armed to the door of these lists?" His answer
-given, he was taken to his pavilion, and afterwards was made to swear
-on the altar that his cause was just. The other did in like fashion.
-Then the pavilions were replaced by chairs whereon the combatants might
-take an occasional rest. Napkins holding a loaf and a bottle of water
-were hung on opposite ends of the lists. The marshal cried three times
-"_Laissez les aller_," and the pair went at it. Far better death than
-defeat. If either yielded, the marshal cried "Hoo," to declare the
-combat at an end. Then the wretch was taken to the scaffold on which
-his shield was hung reversed, his sword was broken, and his spurs
-hacked from his heels. He was now taken to the church where a mass for
-the dead was sung over him, and at last he was haled to the gibbet
-where the hangman claimed his prey.
-
-This is the form of judicial combat that caught the fancy of our great
-writers. In Chaucer's _Knight's Tale_ there is the elaborate set to
-between Palamon and Arcite. In Shakespeare's _Richard II._ there is
-the fiasco of Norfolk and Hereford. In _Lear_ we have the fight to
-the death between Edmund and Edgar, and "every schoolboy knows" The
-Templar's duel in _Ivanhoe_.
-
-Chivalry passed, yet not the half-forgotten wager of battle. A claim so
-to determine a civil dispute was made in 1571, to the great perplexity
-of the lawyers. Elaborate preparations were made, but the case was
-settled in other fashion. Under James I. bills were introduced into
-Parliament to abolish it, but they fell through, and in 1774, at the
-beginning of the North American troubles, when it was proposed to
-punish the New Englanders by depriving them of the appeal of murder,
-Dunning, afterwards Lord Ashburton, described it as that great pillar
-of the Constitution. Burke concurred, and the motion was lost. Perhaps
-they have it yet in the States, at least Dr Cooper, in editing, in
-1857, the statutes at large of South Carolina, treats Wager of Battle
-as an existing fact. In England the end came in dramatic fashion. In
-May 1817 Mary Ashford--a young woman of Langley in Warwickshire, was
-found drowned under suspicious circumstances. A certain Abram Thornton
-was suspected of the murder; he was tried and acquitted, but there
-was much evidence against him, and he had played so ill a part in a
-horrid though vulgar tragedy that the relatives of the dead girl cast
-about to carry the matter further. Now, an old act provided that no
-acquittal by jury should bar an appeal of murder, so William Ashford,
-Mary's brother, appealed Thornton in the Court of King's Bench. He
-was attached, and when called upon pleaded "Not guilty, and am ready
-to defend the same by my body." He then threw down his glove on the
-floor of the Court. It was a curious turn; for no doubt men thought
-that he would put himself upon the country, and stand a second trial by
-jury. There was much legal argument (set forth at great length in the
-reports of the time), for the prosecuting counsel tried hard to "oust
-his battle," but to no purpose, and in the end Thornton was set free.
-In 1819, two years after the drowning of Mary Ashford, the Appeal of
-Murder Act (59 Geo. III. c. 46) abolished the last remnant of Wager of
-Battle.
-
-
-
-
-THE PRESS-GANG
-
-
-Smollett, Galt, Marryatt, and the other naval novelists, not those
-well-nigh forgotten Dry-as-dusts whose works encumber the back shelves
-of our law libraries, are the authorities for the press-gang of popular
-imagination. The sea-port invaded, the house surrounded at dead of
-night by man-o'-war's men with stout cudgels, and by naval officers
-with cutlasses; the able-bodied mariner knocked down _first_ and _then_
-bid stand in the king's name; the official shilling thrust into his
-reluctant palm before he is hauled off in irons--who has not devoured
-with joy this wild romance, with its tang of the sea, its humour and
-rough frolic, the daring and exciting prelude to much more daring and
-more exciting achievements? But how far can we trust these entertaining
-authors? And what was the legal status of the press-gang?
-
-We are like to get nearest the truth in a law case with its official
-documents and sifted evidence and considered decision. The trial of
-one Alexander Broadfoot for the murder of one Calahan is the best
-available. In the April of 1774 H.M.S. _Mortar_ lay at anchor off
-Bristol. The captain held a warrant of impressment, but he could
-delegate his authority only to a commissioned officer, whose name
-must be inserted in his order; and the only one aboard was the
-lieutenant. On the 25th the ship's boat was sent down Channel, _with
-neither captain nor lieutenant_ to look for men. She had no luck till
-evening, when she came across the _Bremen Factor_, a homeward bound
-merchantman, still some leagues from port, but beating thitherward up
-Channel. The man-o'-war's men having boarded her, were proceeding to
-search the hold, when they were confronted by Broadfoot, the boatswain,
-armed to the teeth. He demanded what they came for. "For you and
-your comrades," was the plain and honest, though no doubt irritating
-answer. "Keep back, I have a blunderbuss loaded with swan shot," said
-Broadfoot, levelling his piece. The press-gang stopped. "Where is your
-lieutenant?" he went on. (Evidently this boatswain knew a little of the
-law.) "He is not far off," was the evasive answer, showing that the
-man's acts and words had impressed his assailants. Did Broadfoot grasp
-the fact that they were trespassers? At any rate, he let fly, killed
-Calahan on the spot, and wounded two others. He was tried at Bristol,
-and acquitted of the capital charge--for the action of the man-o'-war's
-men was plainly irregular; but he was found guilty of manslaughter, for
-that he had used more force than was necessary. Another case is that of
-Robert Goldswain, a small freeholder at Marlow, in Bucks. In the March
-of 1778 he was a bargeman on the Thames, engaged in carrying timber to
-the king's yard; with a protection order from the Navy Board to him by
-name so long as he should continue in that service. But these were
-troubled times, the French had just declared for the revolted American
-colonists and our war-ships were frightfully undermanned; so, on the
-16th of March, the Admiralty fixed the next night for a general press
-on the Thames, with direction to seize--despite protection orders--on
-all sailors and watermen whatsoever, saving and excepting merchant
-skippers and men exempted by special acts. Goldswain was in the net,
-and was passed from ship to ship down to the Nore, where his captors
-were overtaken by an order from the Court requiring a return to a writ
-of Habeas Corpus issued on his behalf. Counsel's argument for the
-Admiralty--that the device of first issuing protection orders to lure
-sea and watering men from their lurking-places, and then pouncing on
-them under the authority of a general press, was excellent--did not
-commend itself to the Court, which, in the battle over poor Goldswain's
-body, suspected some antagonism between the Admiralty and the Naval
-Board. In the end my lords gave way, and Marlow received again her
-ravished freeholder.
-
-During the strain and stress of our eighteenth century war-making,
-when we had every need of seamen to man our battle-ships, and could
-not afford the market price for them, there was much impressment, and
-through frequent appeals to the courts the law on the subject was
-exactly determined. It was a prerogative of the Crown, a remnant of
-larger rights which at one time took in soldiers and ships, or their
-equivalent in cash (Hampden's famous trial scarce needs mention); it
-could not be justified (it was allowed) by reason, but only by public
-necessity. On command of the king all sea and river-faring men were
-liable to naval service in time of war. The right to impress was
-founded on immemorial usage, for, though given by no statute, it was
-recognised by many. It was so held on the authority of a case in Queen
-Elizabeth's reign: the sole customary exception was a ferryman; but
-merchant captains were in practice likewise allowed to go free. Only
-in Charles I.'s reign, when all the Crown prerogatives were jealously
-overhauled, was there any serious questioning of its legality, but it
-was exercised by the Commonwealth as well as by the Monarchy. Given
-up in fact some fifty years since, it has never been so in law. You
-find in Horner's _Crown Practice_ (1844) a form of _Habeas Corpus ad
-subjiciendum_ for impressed men, with the comment that it is little
-needed now.
-
-Of the enormous number of commissions and statutes relating to
-impressment, an example taken here and there must suffice. The acts
-express amazement and virtuous indignation at mariners unwilling to
-serve. One (_temp._ Henry VII.) sets forth that such as are chosen,
-and have received their wages, shall, if they give leg-bail, be
-amerced in double, and go to prison for a year--when they are caught.
-Another (_temp._ Philip and Mary) reproves the Thames watermen who,
-in pressing time, "do willingly and obstinately withdraw, hide, and
-convey themselves into secret places and outcovers; and, after the
-said time of pressing is o'erpassed, return to their employments."
-After the Revolution an attempt was made to establish a naval reserve
-by means of a voluntary register, and so do away with impressment, but
-this was a complete failure. Then, to foster the coal and other trades,
-certain exceptions were granted; and still later, sailors in outward
-bound merchantmen were exempted because of the hardship inflicted on
-their employers (the hardship of the sailor impressed in sight of port
-after a long voyage was not considered). When a warship fell in with a
-merchantman on the high seas she impressed what men she would. British
-sailors found on board American vessels were hauled out forthwith, and
-this was one cause of the War of 1812.
-
-Press-gang stories, more or less authentic, are numerous. Here are
-samples which serve to show that the searchers did not nicely
-discriminate between those who were and were not legally subject to
-impressment. A well-dressed man was seized. He protested that he was
-a gentleman of position. "The very boy we want," gleefully replied
-his captors; "for we've such a set of topping blackguards aboard
-the tender, that we wanted a gentleman to teach 'em manners." Sham
-press-gangs for the black-mailing of honest citizens were common. In
-one case a couple had given all their money to go free, when the real
-gang coming up made booty of both parties, and had them aboard in no
-time. The quarrymen at Denny Bowl, sixty strong, were heard to brag
-in their cups what _they_ would do did the press-gang dare to molest
-_them_, whereupon "three merry girls" got into breeches, put cockades
-in their hats, took sword and pistol, and advanced, when the quarrymen
-ran like hares. And to conclude, there is the legend of the gang that
-raided "The Cock and Rummer" in Bow Street. They seized the cook. The
-customers, fearing for their dinner, or themselves, rushed to the
-rescue. Long the strife hung dubious, when the constable (he ought to
-have been a Bow Street runner) stalked in. The gang, with a fine sense
-of humour, let the cook go, seized _him_, and away at a great rate,
-though not fast enough to get clear.
-
-
-
-
-SUMPTUARY LAWS
-
-
-"Act of Parliament" is a term apt to mislead. To-day it is enforced
-by so powerful a machinery that practice conforms to precept; but in
-mediæval England much law was dead letter. Statutes were often mere
-admonitions; they expressed but an ideal, a pious intention. This was
-specially true of the Sumptuary Laws, whereby the dress and food of
-the king's subjects were nicely regulated. If you turn over a book of
-costumes you find that man's attire has varied more than woman's. The
-sorts and conditions of men were marked by rigid lines. This fact was
-shown forth in their dress, and that again re-acted on their modes of
-thought and habits of life. "Men's apparel," says Edmund Spenser, "is
-commonly marked according to their condition, and their conditions
-are often-times governed by their garment, for the person that is
-gowned is by his gown put in mind of gravity, and also restrained from
-lightness by the very unaptness of his Tweed." Of old time man's dress
-was rich and varied, but how to catch its vanished effect? In Courts
-of Justice there is still the splendid, if occasional, bravery of the
-judge. See the same man in private, gaze on divinity disrobed, and the
-disenchantment measures for you what is lost in the splendid garb of
-other days. In mediæval Europe the Church first condemned a too ornate
-appearance. Thus, under our early Norman Kings, long hair was much in
-vogue. In 1104 Bishop Serlo, preaching before Henry I. and his Court
-in Normandy, attacked this fashion roundly, compared his hearers to
-"filthy goats," and moved them by his eloquence to tears of contrition.
-He saw and seized that softer hour. Descending from the pulpit he then
-and there clipped the polls of them that heard him till he must fain
-sheath his shears for lack of argument. This rape of the locks was
-followed by a royal edict against long hair. Alas! for this story.
-Rochester Cathedral still bears the effigies of Henry and Maud his
-queen; each is adorned even as Absalom, and Time, whilst it has mauled
-their faces in cruel fashion, has with quaint irony preserved intact
-those stone tresses.
-
-Two centuries pass ere the Sumptuary Laws proper begin. The 10 Edward
-III. c. 3 (1336) ordered that no man was to have more than two courses
-at dinner, nor more than two kinds of meat, with potage in each course;
-but on eighteen holidays in the year the lieges might stuff at will.
-Next Parliament common folk were forbidden to wear furs; but the 37
-Edward III. was the great session for such work, made needful (it was
-thought) by the sudden increase of luxury from the plunder of the
-French wars. Some half-dozen Acts prescribed to each rank, from peers
-to ploughmen, its wear; nay, the very price of the stuff was fixed;
-whilst all wives were to garb themselves according to their husbands'
-means--a pious wish, repeated a century afterwards, in an Act of the
-Scots James II. The veils of the baser sort were not to cost more than
-12d. apiece: embroidery or silk was forbidden to servants, and these
-were to eat of flesh or fish but once a day. Cloth merchants were to
-make stuff enough, and shopkeepers to have stock enough, to supply
-the anticipated demand. Such apparel as infringed the statute was
-forfeit to the king. The knight's dress will serve for sample of what
-was required. It was to be cloth of silver, with girdles reasonably
-embellished with silver, and woollen cloth of the value of six marks
-the piece. Under Richard II. monstrous sleeves were much affected. A
-monkish scribe inveighs bitterly against these "pokys, like bag-pipes."
-Some hung down to the knees; yea, even to the feet. Servants were as
-bad as their masters! When potage is brought to table, "the sleeves
-go into them and get the first taste." Nay, they are "devil's
-receptacles," since anything stolen is safely lodged therein. And so a
-statute of the time prohibited any man below a banneret from wearing
-large hanging sleeves, open or closed.
-
-The fashion changed to _dagges_, a term explained by the 8th of Henry
-IV., which forbade "gown or garment cut or slashed into pieces in the
-form of letters, rose-leaves, and posies of various kinds, or any
-such devices." The fantastic peaked shoes of the fifteenth century,
-sometimes only held up by a chain from the girdle, were fair mark for
-the lawgiver, and under Edward IV. no less person than a lord was
-allowed peaks exceeding two inches. An Act in the same reign banned
-the costly head-gear of women. Henry VIII. saw to men's garb as well
-as their beliefs. His first Parliament forbade costly apparel, and
-there is preserved in the Record Office a letter from Wolsey enclosing
-to the King, at his request, the Act of Apparel, with an abstract,
-for examination and correction. Exemptions were not unknown: thus,
-in 1517, Henry Conway of Bermondsey obtained license to wear "camlet,
-velvet, and sarcenet, satin and damask, of green, black, or russet
-colour in his clothing." Under Queen Mary common folk who wore silk on
-"hat, bonnet, girdle, scabbard, hose, shoes, or spur-leathers," were
-grievously amerced. Under Elizabeth the regulations were numberless:
-thus there is an act for "uttering of caps, and for true making of
-hats and caps." No one was to engage in this business unless he had
-been "a prentice or covenant servant" by the space of seven years. No
-one under the degree of knight was to wear a cap of velvet. But these
-were not pure sumptuary regulations: they were for protection of home
-industries. A statute of the previous reign had declared that no man
-was to buy more than twelve hats or caps, be it out of this realm;
-and a previous Act of Elizabeth had strangely provided that if anyone
-sold foreign apparel on credit for longer than eight days to persons
-not having £3000 a year he should be without legal remedy against his
-debtor.
-
-On the 15th June 1574, an elaborate proclamation complained of
-"the wasting and undoying of a great number of young gentlemen"
-who were "allured by the vayne shewe of those thyngs." A schedule
-was appended in which the costumes prescribed for all sorts and
-conditions of men were set forth. In the Star Chamber on June 12th,
-1600, my Lord Keeper gravely admonished the judges to look to all
-sorts of abuses--"Solicitors and pettifoggers," "Gentlemen that leave
-hospitality and housekeeping and hide in cities and borough towns,"
-"Masterless men that live by their sword and their wit, meddlers in
-princes' matters and libellers," and last, but not least, "to the
-vanity and excess of woman's apparel." All was in vain, if we are to
-believe the fierce invective of Stubb's _Anatomie of Abuses_. "There
-is now," he groans, "such a confused mingle-mangle of apparel, and
-such preposterous excess thereof as every one is permitted to flaunt
-it out in whatever apparel he listeth himself, or can get by any
-kind of means." It was horrible to hear that shirts were sold at £10
-a piece, and "it is a small matter now to bestow twenty nobles, ten
-pound, twenty pound, forty pound, yea, a hundred pound, of one pair
-of breeches (God be merciful to us!)" After this aught else were
-anti-climax, and so for the women he can only say they were worse than
-the men. A new order of things came in with the next reign, for the act
-Jac. I. c. 25, sec. 45, repealed at one stroke all statutes against
-apparel. In Scotland they kept up the game some time longer, but one
-need not pursue the subject there, though a curious statute of the
-Scots James II. (1457) must have a word. It provided that "na woman cum
-to Kirk nor mercat with her face mussled that she may nocht be kenn'd
-under the pain of escheit of the curchie" (forfeiture of the hood). In
-Ireland there was a law (says Spenser) which "forbiddeth any to weare
-theyre beardes on the upper lip and none under the chinn:" another
-"which putteth away saffron shirtes and smockes," and so forth; but
-these were of English importation.
-
-In the North American colonies sumptuary legislation has a history of
-its own. In Massachusetts an edict of September 1639, declaims against
-the "much waste of the good creatures (not the tipplers, but the
-tipple) by the vain drinking of healths," which practice is straightway
-forbidden. Excess or bravery of apparel is condemned, and no one is
-to wear a dress "with any lace on it, silver, gold silk, or thread
-under the penalty of forfeiture." Again, it is provided that children
-or servants are not to have ornamental apparel. Here is an individual
-case. Robert Coles, in March 1634, for drunkenness is disfranchised
-and condemned for a whole year to "wear about his neck, and so to hang
-upon his outward garment a D made of red cloth and set upon white"--a
-very unromantic scarlet letter! These things, too, passed away, but
-in the Maine Liquor Law of 1851, one traces the revival of the old
-idea. In England the thing lived not again. Under the Commonwealth
-public opinion enforced a "sober garb." Charles II. had some idea of
-a national costume, but he was too wise or too careless to attempt
-legislation. In 1747 the wearing of the Highland dress was forbidden,
-but that was policy, just as centuries before the Jews had a special
-garb ordained for them. Also a number of laws were passed to promote
-home manufactures: so under Charles I. and Charles II. the entry of
-foreign bone-lace was prohibited, though the second monarch granted
-licence for importing same to John Eaton for the use of the royal
-family. It would also serve, he coolly remarked, for patterns. There is
-one other curious example. Too much foreign linen was used, and so the
-30th of Charles II. c. 3 ordered the dead (save the plague-stricken)
-to be buried in woollen shrouds. The relatives must file an affidavit
-with the clergyman as to this, and £5 was the fine for _him_ if he
-neglected his part. Did the vision of that unseemly shroud really
-disturb poor Nance Oldfield's last moments, as Pope would have us
-believe?
-
- "Odious! in woollen! 'twould a saint provoke!"
- Were the last words that poor Narcissa spoke.
- "No: let a charming chintz and Brussels lace
- Wrap my cold limbs and shade my lifeless face!"
-
-"Narcissa" had her wish: the "Brussels lace" of her head-dress, her
-"Holland shift," a "pair of new kid gloves on her cold hands," were the
-talk of the town; so they tricked her out for Westminster Abbey.
-
-Almost up to Waterloo the Act lingered on the Statute Book, till some
-ingenious rascal brought an action against various clergymen for the £5
-penalty, for that they had not certified to churchwardens the cases of
-non-compliance. And so, in 1814, the 54th George III. c. 108 swept away
-the strange provision.
-
-
-
-
-PRINTED BY TURNBULL AND SPEARS, EDINBURGH
-
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-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
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- Text in italics is surrounded with underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in spelling, punctuation, and hyphenation have been
- standardized.
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Law's Lumber Room, by Francis Watt
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
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-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Law's Lumber Room
-
-Author: Francis Watt
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2017 [EBook #55724]
-[Last updated: October 19, 2020]
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAW'S LUMBER ROOM ***
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-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt=""/></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="center"><span class="xlarge">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in spelling, punctuation, and hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>The title page of the original book image was modified and used as the cover for this eBook, and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h1>The Law's Lumber Room</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>Of this Edition 600 copies have been printed
-for England and America.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xlarge">The<br />
-Law's Lumber Room</span></p>
-
-<p>By<br />
-<span class="large">Francis Watt</span></p>
-
-<p>London<br />
-John Lane, The Bodley Head, Vigo St.<br />
-Chicago: A. C. M<sup>c</sup>Clurg &amp; Co.<br />
-<br />
-<small>MDCCCXCV</small>
-</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large">
-TO<br />
-WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY<br />
-FLOTSAM AND JETSAM<br />
-FROM HIS OLD JOURNAL</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PREFATORY</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To</span> the Lumber Room you drag furniture
-no longer fit for daily use, and there it lies,
-old fashioned, cumbrous, covered year by
-year with fresh depths of dust. Is it
-fanciful to apply this image to the Law?
-Has not that its Lumber Room of repealed
-Statutes, discarded methods, antiquated
-text-books&mdash;"many a quaint and curious
-volume of forgotten lore"?</p>
-
-<p>But law, even when an actual part of
-the life of to-day is like to prove a tedious
-thing to the lay reader, can one hope to
-find the dry bones of romance in its
-antiquities? I venture to answer, "Yes."
-Among all the rubbish, the outworn instruments
-of cruelty, superstition, terror,
-there are things of interest. "Benefit of
-Clergy," the "Right of Sanctuary," bulk
-large in English literature; the "Law of
-the Forest" gives us a glimpse into the
-life of Mediæval England as actual as,
-though so much more sombre than, the
-vision conjured up in Chaucer's magic
-<i>Prologue</i>. "Trial by Ordeal" and "Wager
-of Battle" touch on superstitions and beliefs
-that lay at the very core of the
-nation's being.</p>
-
-<p>"As full of fictions as English law,"
-wrote Macaulay in the early part of the
-century; but we have changed that, we
-are more practical, if less picturesque, and
-John Doe and all his tribe are long
-out of date. Between the reign of James
-I. and that of Victoria all the subjects here
-discussed have suffered change, with one
-exception. The "Press-Gang" is still a
-legal possibility, but how hard to fancy it
-ever again in actual use!</p>
-
-<p>I fear that these glimpses of other days
-may seem harsh and sombre; there is blood
-everywhere; the cruel consequences of law
-or custom are pushed to their logical conclusions
-with ruthless determination. The
-contrast to the almost morbid sentimentalism
-of to-day is striking. So difficult
-it seems to hit the just mean! But
-the improvement is enormous. Gibes at
-the Law are the solace of its victims, and
-no one would deprive them of so innocent
-a relief, yet if these cared to enquire they
-would often find that the mark of their
-jest had vanished years ago to the Lumber
-Room.</p>
-
-<p>The plan of these papers did not permit
-a detailed reference to authorities, but I
-have mentioned every work from which I
-derived special assistance. I will only add
-that this little book originally appeared as
-contributions to the <i>National Observer</i>
-under Mr W. E. Henley's editorship. I
-have made a few additions and corrections.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2></div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="3" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>BENEFIT OF CLERGY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>PEINE FORTE ET DURE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>A PASSAGE IN SHAKESPEARE (FINES AND RECOVERIES)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>THE CUSTOM OF THE MANOR</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>DEODANDS</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>THE LAW OF THE FOREST</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>PAR NOBILE FRATRUM (JOHN DOE AND RICHARD ROE)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>SANCTUARY</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>TRIAL BY ORDEAL</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>WAGER OF BATTLE</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>THE PRESS GANG </td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>SUMPTUARY LAWS </td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">BENEFIT OF CLERGY</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Benefit</span> of Clergy" is a phrase which
-has entered into English literature and
-English thought. The thing itself exists
-no longer, though the last traces of it
-were only removed during the present
-reign; but it so strikingly illustrates
-certain peculiarities of English law-making,
-it has, moreover, so curious a history
-as to be interesting even to-day. It took
-its rise in times when the pretensions of
-the Church, high in themselves, were
-highly favoured by the secular power.
-The clergy was a distinct order, and to
-subject its members to the jurisdiction of
-the secular courts was deemed improper;
-so, when a clerk was seized under a charge
-of murder, or some other crime, the ordinary
-stepped forth and claimed him for the
-"Court Christian," whereto the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
-matter was at once relegated. There the
-bishop or his deputy sat as judge. There
-was a jury of twelve clerks before whom
-the prisoner declared his innocence on
-oath. He was ready with twelve compurgators
-(a species of witnesses to character)
-who, after their kind, said more good
-of him than they had any warrant for;
-after which, on the question of fact, some
-witnesses were examined for, but none
-against him. This curious proceeding,
-which was not abolished till the time of
-Elizabeth, soon became a sham. Nearly
-every accused got off, and the rare verdict
-of guilty had no worse result than degradation
-or imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p>Now, so far, the system is intelligible,
-but in the succeeding centuries it lost this
-quality. English legal reformers have ever
-shown a strong disinclination to make a
-clean sweep of a system, but they keep
-tinkering at it year after year with a view
-of making it more rational or better
-adapted to current needs. They did so
-here, and the result was a strange jumble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
-of contradictions. First, the privilege was
-confined to such as had the clerical dress
-and tonsure, afterwards it was extended to
-mere assistants, the very door-keepers being
-held within the charmed circle; yet the
-line had to be drawn somewhere, and how
-to decide when every ruffian at his wits'
-end for a defence was certain with blatant
-voice to claim the privilege? Well, could
-he read? If so, ten to one he was
-an ecclesiastic of some sort, and therefore
-entitled to his clergy. And it soon came
-that this was the only test demanded. If
-you could read you were presumed a
-parson, and had your right to at least
-one crime free. As no woman could
-possibly be ordained, she could not "pray
-her clergy"&mdash;(an exception was made
-in the case of a professed nun)&mdash;nor might
-a <i>bigamus</i>, who was not a man who had
-committed bigamy, but one who "hath
-married two wives or one widow." However,
-a statute (1 Edw. VI., c. 12, s.
-16, <i>temp.</i> 1547) made an end of this
-latter distinction by declaring, with quaint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
-tautology that <i>bigami</i> were to have their
-clergy, "although they or any of them have
-been divers and sundry times married to
-any single woman or single women, or to
-any widow or widows, or to two wives or
-more." Before this it might well be
-that your chance of saving your neck
-depended on whether you had married
-a widow or not; which species was
-dangerous in a sense undreamt of by
-Mr Weller. As regards the reading, it
-must not be supposed that a difficult
-examination was passed by the prisoner
-before he escaped. You had but to read
-what came to be significantly called the
-Neck-verse from the book which the officer
-of court handed you when you "prayed
-your clergy." The Neck-verse was the first
-verse of the fifty-first Psalm in the Vulgate.
-It was only three words&mdash;<i>Miserere mei,
-Deus</i>: "Have mercy on me, O God." It
-seems strange that it was ever recorded of
-anyone that he did not read, and was
-therefore condemned to be hanged; for
-surely it were easy to get these words by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
-heart and to repeat them at the proper
-time? This must have been done in many
-cases, and yet sometimes criminals were so
-densely ignorant and stupid, or it might
-be merely bewildered, that they failed; then
-the wretch paid the penalty of his life.
-"<i>Suspendatur</i>," wrote the scribe against
-his name, and off he was hauled. The
-endless repetition of this word proved too
-much for official patience, and with brutal
-brevity the inscription finally appears,
-"Sus." or "S."</p>
-
-<p>And now the Neck-verse was free to everyone
-were he or were he not in holy orders,
-and he claimed the privilege after conviction,
-but in the reign of Henry VII. (1487) an
-important change was made. A person
-who claimed clergy was to be branded on
-the crown of his thumb with an "M" if he
-were a murderer, with a "T" if he were
-guilty of any other felony; if he "prayed
-his clergy" a second time this was refused
-him, unless he were actually in orders. Of
-course the mark on the thumb was to record
-his previous escape from justice. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
-with this "Tyburn T" (as it was called in
-Elizabethan slang) that Ben Jonson was
-branded. It is only within the last few
-years that careful Mr Cordy Jeaffreson has
-exhumed the true story from the Middlesex
-County Records. The poet quarrelled and
-fought a duel with Gabriel Spencer, an actor,
-and probably a former colleague. The affair
-came off at Shoreditch. Jonson, with his
-rapier, which the indictment (for a reason
-explained in the chapter on "Deodands")
-values at three shillings, briskly attacked
-his opponent, and almost immediately gave
-him a thrust in the side, whereof Spencer
-died then and there. Ben was forthwith
-seized and thrown into prison. Whilst
-waiting his trial he said that spies were
-set on him, but he was too much for them,
-and afterwards all the judges got from
-him was but "Ay" and "No." Why spies
-should have been necessary in so plain
-a case is far from clear. It is more
-significant that a devoted priest succeeded
-in converting him for the time to Roman
-Catholicism, and he afterwards confessed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
-to Drummond of Hawthornden that he had
-come near the gallows. However, what
-he said, or did not say, is of little weight
-as compared with the evidence of contemporary
-judicial records. The fact is
-clear that the poet of <i>Every Man in his
-Humour</i>, the cunning artist of <i>Queen and
-Huntress</i>, and <i>Drink to me only with
-thine Eyes</i>, had a true bill found against
-him by the grand jury, who sat, by the
-way, in a tavern, for as yet Hicks Hall,
-the predecessor of the Session's-House on
-Clerkenwell Green, was not.</p>
-
-<p>In October 1598, he was taken to the
-Old Bailey to stand his trial. He pleaded
-guilty, asked for the book, read like a clerk
-("Jonson's learned sock," forsooth!), and as
-the strangely abbreviated Latin of the
-record has it, "<i>sign' cum lra' T et del</i>,"
-that is, marked with the letter "T," and
-set at large to repair to "The Sun," "The
-Bolt," "The Triple Tun," or some other
-of those dim, enchanting Elizabethan
-taverns, there to give such an account of
-the transaction as sufficed to dissemble it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-till this age of grubbers and dictionaries
-wherein you are destined to nose every
-ancient scandal as you go up the staircase
-of letters. It has been suggested
-that the officer, moved to inexplicable
-tenderness, touched him with a cold iron.
-The only ground for this is that Dekker,
-in his savage Satiro Mastix; or, <i>The
-Untrussing of the Humourous Poet</i>,
-makes no reference to the "Tyburn T."
-One fancies that Ben speedily acquired
-a trick of carrying his hand so that the
-mark was not readily seen, or he may
-have cut or burnt it out as others did.
-All the same, the best evidence shows
-it to have been there.</p>
-
-<p>In the reign of James I. another
-change was made. Women got the
-benefit of clergy in certain cases, and
-afterwards they were put on the same
-footing as men. Then in 1705 the
-necessity for reading was abolished, and
-in 1779 so was branding.</p>
-
-<p>But another process was going on all this
-time. A great and ever-increasing number<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-of crimes were declared to be without benefit
-of clergy. The selection was somewhat
-capricious. Among the exempted felonies
-were abduction with intent to marry,
-stealing clothes off the racks, stealing the
-kings' stores, and so on. Naturally the
-whole subject fell into inextricable confusion,
-and when it was abolished in 1827,
-even pedants must have given a sigh of
-relief. One detail escaped the reformer:
-since the time of Edward VI. every peer
-("though he cannot read," saith the
-statute) enjoyed a privilege akin to that
-of clergy, and it was not till 1841 that
-this last vestige of the system vanished
-from the statute-book. I will only add
-that, in its details, "benefit of clergy"
-was even more grotesque and fantastic
-than it has here been possible to set
-forth.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">PEINE FORTE ET DURE</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> England during many centuries a prisoner
-was called to the bar before trial and enjoined
-to hold up his right hand, by which
-act he was held to admit himself the person
-named in the indictment. The clerk then
-asked him, "How say you, are you guilty
-or not guilty?" If he answered, "Not
-guilty," the next question was: "Culprit,
-how will you be tried?" to which he responded,
-"By God and my country." "God
-send you a good deliverance," rejoined the
-official, and the trial went forward. If the
-accused missed any of these responses, or
-would not speak at all, and if the offence
-were treason or a misdemeanour, his silence
-was taken for confession of guilt, and
-sentence was passed forthwith. If the
-charge were felony, a jury was empanelled
-to try whether he stood "mute of malice,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
-or "mute by the visitation of God." If this
-last were found, the trial went on; if the
-other, he was solemnly warned by the judges
-of the terrible consequences summed up by
-Lord Coke (trial of Sir Richard Weston in
-1615, for Sir Thomas Overbury's murder) in
-the three words&mdash;<i>onere, frigore, et fame</i>.
-The proceedings were most commonly
-adjourned to give him time for reflection;
-but if after every exhortation he remained
-obdurate, then he was adjudged to suffer the
-<i>peine forte et dure</i>. The judgment of
-the Court was in these words: "That you
-return from whence you came, to a low
-dungeon into which no light can enter;
-that you be stripped naked save a cloth
-about your loins, and laid down, your back
-upon the ground; that there be set upon
-your body a weight of iron as great as you
-can bear&mdash;and greater; that you have no
-sustenance, save on the first day three
-morsels of the coarsest bread, on the second
-day three draughts of stagnant water from
-the pool nearest the prison door, on the
-third day again three morsels of bread as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
-before, and such bread and such water
-alternately from day to day; till you be
-pressed to death; your hands and feet
-tied to posts, and a sharp stone under your
-back."</p>
-
-<p>There is but one rational way to discuss
-an institution of this sort. Let us trace
-out its history, for thus only can we explain
-how it came to have an existence at all.
-For the prisoner himself there was usually
-a very strong reason why <i>he</i> should stand
-mute. If he were convicted of felony his
-goods were forfeited; while in case of
-capital felony, the result of attainder was
-corruption of blood so that he could neither
-inherit nor transmit landed property.
-Often he must have known that conviction
-was certain. Had he fondness enough for
-his heirs&mdash;children or other&mdash;to make him
-choose this hideous torture instead of milder
-methods whereby the law despatched the
-ordinary convict from this world? Well,
-very many underwent the punishment.
-Between 1609-1618 the number was
-thirty-two (three of them women) in rural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
-Middlesex alone. "<i>Mortuus en pen' fort' et
-dur'</i>," so the clerk wrote for epitaph against
-each name, and something still stranger
-than the penalty itself is revealed to us
-by an examination of the original records.
-Many of the culprits were evidently totally
-destitute, and these underwent the <i>peine
-forte et dure</i> from stupidity, obstinacy,
-or sheer indifference to mortal suffering
-and death.</p>
-
-<p>The custom of pressing did not obtain
-its full development at once, and there is
-some difficulty as to how it began. A
-plausible explanation is given in Pike's
-"History of Crime," and is supported by the
-authority of the late Mr Justice Stephen.
-At one time a man charged with a serious
-offence was tried by ordeal; but by paying
-money to the king, it was possible to get
-the exceptional privilege of a trial by jury.
-Thus, when the accused was asked how he
-would be tried, his answer originally ran,
-"by God" (equal to by ordeal), or "by my
-country" (equal to by jury), since to put
-yourself on the country meant to submit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
-yourself to this last. But trial by ordeal
-was abolished about 1215, and the alternative
-was a privilege to be claimed, not a
-necessity to be endured. Offenders soon
-discovered that by standing mute and declining
-to claim this privilege, they put the
-Court in a difficulty. The ideas of those
-distant days were simple exceedingly, and a
-legal form had strange force and efficacy.
-To put a prisoner before a jury without
-his consent was not to be thought of; but
-how to get his consent? At first the knot
-was rather cut than loosened. Thus, in some
-cases, the accused were put to death right
-off for not consenting to be tried "according
-to the law and custom of the realm." Then
-this was held too severe, and under Edward
-I., in the proceedings of the Parliament of
-Westminster, occurs the earliest definite
-mention of the punishment. It was enacted
-that notorious felons refusing to plead should
-be confined in the <i>prison forte et dure</i>.
-Here they went "barefooted and bareheaded,
-in their coat only in prison, upon the bare
-ground continually night and day, fastened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-down with irons," and only eating and
-drinking on alternate days as already set
-forth. It was bad enough, no doubt, but
-not of necessity fatal. So the authorities
-perceived, and they again cut the knot by
-a policy of starvation. So one infers from
-the case of Cecilia, wife of John Rygeway,
-in the time of Edward III. Cecilia
-was indicted for the murder of her husband;
-she refused to plead. Being committed
-to prison, she lived without meat
-or drink for forty days; and this being
-set down to the Virgin Mary, she was
-thereupon allowed to go free. This procedure
-seems to have been found too
-slow, and the increase of business at
-the assizes seemed like to end in a hopeless
-block. Were the judges to encamp
-in a country town while the prisoners made
-up their mind as to pleading? Something
-was wanted to "mend or end" the stubborn
-rascals; and under Henry IV., in
-the beginning of the fifteenth century, the
-"prison" <i>forte et dure</i> became the "peine"
-<i>forte et dure</i>: with the consequence that,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
-if the accused declined to plead, there
-was an end of him in a few hours, the
-provision of bread and water being a mere
-remnant of the older form of sentence.
-This procedure lasted till 1772, when the
-12 Geo. III., c. 20 made "standing mute
-in cases of felony equivalent to conviction."
-In 1827 it was enacted by 7 and
-8 Geo. IV., c. 28, "that in such cases a
-plea of not guilty should be entered for
-the person accused." The curious formal
-dialogue between the clerk and the prisoner
-was abolished that same year. Something
-stronger than exhortation was now
-and again used before the obdurate
-prisoner was sentenced to pressing, thus
-at the Old Bailey in 1734, the thumbs
-of one John Durant were tied together
-with whipcord, which the executioner strung
-up hard and tight in presence of the
-Court; he was promised the <i>peine forte et
-dure</i> if this did not answer, but upon a
-little time being given him for reflection,
-he speedily made up his mind to plead not
-guilty.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>It is difficult to explain the distinction
-drawn between ordinary felony on the
-one hand and treason and misdemeanours
-on the other. Perhaps the explanation is
-that the last, being much lighter offences,
-were never made the subject of trial by
-ordeal, and that treason being a crime
-endangering the very existence of the
-State, a sort of necessity compelled the
-judge to proceed in the most summary
-manner. No student of English History
-needs to be reminded that a trial for
-treason resulted almost as a matter of
-course in a conviction for treason. Peers
-of the realm had many privileges, but
-they were not exempt from the consequences
-of standing mute. Nor, as already
-noted, were women. Perhaps it were
-unreasonable to expect a criticism of the
-system from contemporary judges or text
-writers; but what they did say was odd
-enough; they did not condemn pressing,
-but they highly extolled the clemency of
-the law which directed the Court to
-reason with and admonish the accused<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
-before it submitted him to this dread
-penalty.</p>
-
-<p>I shall now give some examples of practice.
-Fortunately (or unfortunately you
-may think as you read) we have at least
-one case recorded in great detail, though,
-curiously enough, it has escaped the notice
-of an authority so eminent as Mr Justice
-Stephen.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Clitherow was pressed to death
-at York on Lady Day, March 25th, 1586,
-and the story thereof was written by John
-Mush, secular priest, and her spiritual
-director. Margaret's husband was a Protestant,
-though his brother was a priest, and
-all his children appear to have been of
-the older faith. Accused of harbouring
-Jesuit and Seminary priests, of hearing
-mass, and so on, she was committed to
-York Castle, and in due time was arraigned
-in the Common Hall. In answer
-to the usual questions, she said that she
-would be tried "by God and by your own
-consciences," and refused to make any
-other answer. It was sheer obstinacy:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
-she was a married woman, and she could
-have lost nothing by going to trial. But
-she coveted martyrdom, which everybody
-concerned appears, at first at any rate, to
-have been anxious to deny her. It was
-plainly intimated that if she would let
-herself be tried she would escape: "I
-think the country," said Clinch, the senior
-judge, "cannot find you guilty upon the
-slender evidence." The proceedings were
-adjourned, and the same night "Parson
-Whigington, a Puritan preacher," came and
-argued with her, apparently in the hope
-of persuading her to plead; but he failed
-to change her purpose; the next day she
-was brought back to the Hall. Something
-of a wrangle ensued between herself
-and Clinch, and in the end the latter
-seemed on the point of pronouncing sentence.
-Then Whigington stood up and
-began to speak; "the murmuring and
-noise in the Hall would not suffer him to
-be heard;" but he would not be put off,
-and "the judge commanded silence to hear
-him." He made a passionate appeal to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
-the Court ("Did not perhaps God open
-the mouth of Balaam's ass?" is the somewhat
-ungracious comment of Father
-Mush.) "My lord," said he, "take heed
-what you do. You sit here to do justice;
-this woman's case is touching life and
-death, you ought not, either by God's law
-or man's, to judge her to die upon the
-slender witness of a boy;" with much
-more to the same effect. Clinch was at
-his wits' end, and went so far as to
-entreat the prisoner to plead in the
-proper form: "Good woman, I pray you
-put yourself to the country. There is no
-evidence but a boy against you, and whatsoever
-they (the jury) do, yet we may
-show mercy afterwards." She was moved
-not a whit; and then Rhodes, the other
-judge, broke in: "Why stand we all day
-about this naughty, wilful woman?" Yet
-once again she was entreated, but as vainly
-as before; it was evident that the law
-must take its course; and "then the
-judge bade the sheriff look to her, who
-pinioned her arms with a cord." She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-was carried back to prison through the
-crowd, of whom some said, "She received
-comfort from the Holy Ghost;" others,
-"that she was possessed of a merry
-devil." When her husband was told of
-her condemnation, "he fared like a man
-out of his wits, and wept so vehemently
-that the blood gushed out of his nose in
-great quantity." Some of the Council
-suggested that she was with child. There
-seems to have been some foundation for
-the remark, at any rate, Clinch caught
-eagerly at the idea. "God defend she should
-die if she be with child," said he several
-times, when the sheriff asked for directions,
-and others of sterner mould were
-pressing for her despatch. Kind-hearted
-Whigington tried again and again to persuade
-her; and the Lord Mayor of York,
-who had married her mother ("a rich
-widow which died before this tragedy
-the summer last"), begged her on his
-knees, "with great show of sorrow and
-affection," to pronounce the words that
-had such strange efficacy. It was all in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-vain, so at last even Whigington abandoned
-his attempt, and "after he had
-pitied her case awhile, he departed and
-came no more."</p>
-
-<p>Her execution was fixed for Friday, and
-the fact was notified to her the night
-before. In the early morning of her last
-day on earth she quietly talked the matter
-over with another woman. "I will procure,"
-the woman said, "some friends to
-lay weight on you, that you may be
-quickly despatched from your pain." She
-answered her that it must not be. At
-eight the sheriffs came for her, and "she
-went barefoot and barelegged, her gown
-loose about her." The short street was
-crowded with people to whom she dealt
-forth alms. At the appointed place, one
-of the sheriffs, "abhorring the cruel fact,
-stood weeping at the door;" but the other,
-whose name was Fawcett, was of harder
-stuff. He "commanded her to put off
-her apparel," whereupon she and the other
-woman "requested him, on their knees,
-that she might die in her smock, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
-that for the honour of womankind they
-would not see her naked." That could
-not be granted, but they were allowed to
-clothe her in a long habit of linen she had
-herself prepared for the occasion. She now
-lay down on the ground. On her face was
-a handkerchief. A door was laid upon her.
-"Her hands she joined towards her face";
-but Fawcett said they must be bound, and
-bound they were to two posts, "so that her
-body and her arms made a perfect cross."
-They continued to vex the passing soul with
-vain words, but at last they put the weights
-on the door. In her intolerable anguish
-she gave but a single cry: "Jesu! Jesu!
-Jesu! have mercy upon me!" Then there
-was stillness; though the end was not yet.
-"She was in dying one quarter of an hour.
-A sharp stone as much as a man's fist put
-under her back, upon her was laid a quantity
-of seven or eight hundredweight to the
-least, which, breaking her ribs, caused them,
-to burst forth of the skin." It was now
-nine in the morning, but not till three of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
-the afternoon were the braised remains
-taken from the press.</p>
-
-<p>Stories of violence and cruelty serve not
-our purpose unless they illustrate some
-point, and I shall but refer to two other
-cases.</p>
-
-<p>Major Strangeways was arraigned in
-1658 (under the Commonwealth be it
-noted) for the murder of his brother-in-law.
-In presence of the coroner's jury
-he was made to take the corpse by
-the hand and touch its wounds, for it
-was supposed that, if he were guilty,
-these would bleed afresh. There was no
-bleeding, but this availed him nothing,
-and he was put on his trial at the Old
-Bailey in due course. He refused to plead,
-and made no secret of his motive; he foresaw
-conviction, and desired to prevent the
-forfeiture of his estate. He was ordered
-to undergo the <i>peine forte et dure</i>. The
-press was put on him angle-wise; it was
-enough to hurt, but not to kill, so the bystanders
-benevolently added their weight,
-and in ten minutes all was over. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
-dead body was then displayed to the
-public.</p>
-
-<p>Again, in 1726, a man named Burnworth
-was arraigned at Kingston for
-murder. At first he refused to plead,
-but after being pressed for an hour and
-three-quarters with four hundredweight
-of iron, he yielded. He was carried
-back to the dock, said he was not guilty,
-and was tried, convicted, and hanged.
-There was at least one case in the reign
-of George II.&mdash;but enough of such horrors.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">A PASSAGE IN SHAKESPEARE</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large"><strong>FINES AND RECOVERIES</strong></span></p>
-
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Is</span> this the fine of his fines, and the
-recovery of his recoveries, to have his fine
-pate full of fine dust? Will his vouchers
-vouch him no more of his purchases, and
-double ones too, than the length and
-breadth of a pair of indentures?" Thus
-the Prince of Denmark moralising in the
-graveyard scene in Hamlet over the skull
-of a supposed lawyer: with more to the
-same effect, all showing that Shakespeare
-had a knowledge of law terms remarkable
-in a layman, and that he used them
-with curious precision. In the huge
-body of Shakespearian literature there are
-special works (one by Lord Chancellor
-Campbell) on the fact, which has been
-used to buttress up the Baconian authorship
-theory (indeed, it is the only positive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
-fact at all in point). Again, it has been
-conjectured that the dramatist spent some
-time in a lawyer's office, and that phrases
-from the deeds he engrossed stuck in his
-memory. It is far more likely that, being
-the man of his age he was, he would read
-in and round the law as well as much else
-for its own sake, and that fines and recoveries
-were so odd in themselves, and
-so excellently illustrative of English history
-and procedure, that they fairly took his
-mighty fancy.</p>
-
-<p>Recoveries were already some two
-hundred years old in his time, and, to
-judge from the tone of the passage,
-people must even then have held them in
-derision. But they were to last full two
-hundred years more; for not till 1833 did
-they vanish from the scene. Recoveries
-were methods of disentailing an estate by
-means of a complicated series of fictions.
-They arose in this way:&mdash;Before 1285,
-when land was given to a man and the
-heirs of his body, the judges ruled that,
-the moment a son was born, the father<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-held the estate as a simple freehold,
-which he could sell or make away with
-very much as he chose. The great
-landowners were ill-content at this; they
-meant their tenants to enjoy their estates
-only as long as they rendered useful service
-in return, and if issue failed a man, they
-thought the land should revert to his lord
-on his death. Hence in that year an
-act procured by their influence, called
-<i>De Donis Conditionalibus</i>, or the Statute
-of Westminster the Second (13 Ed. I., c.
-1), created the Estate Tail (<i>i.e.</i> <i>Taillé</i>, or
-restricted). It provided that land given to
-a man and his heirs as above, reverted
-to the original donor on failure of the
-donee's issue. Blackstone waxes eloquent
-over the evils that ensued. Children declined
-obedience to a father who could
-not disinherit; farmers lost their leases,
-which had no force against the heir;
-and creditors were defrauded of their
-debts, which constituted no charge on the
-land, nay, treasons were fostered, insomuch
-as the traitor's interest lapsing at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
-his death, nothing was left for the king
-to seize. Yet it was not till the reign of
-Edward IV. that a device was found to
-evade the Statute. <i>Taltarum's Case</i> was
-decided in 1472. It is loosely said that
-this established the validity of recoveries,
-but they were in use some time before,
-and Sir Frederick Pollock will have it
-that it was the oddity of the name which
-made a landmark of the decision. A Recovery
-was a sort of friendly or fictitious
-action, whereby the estate was adjudged
-to an outsider, whose claim, though
-baseless&mdash;if one did not look beyond
-the four corners of the action&mdash;was
-acquiesced in by the nominal defendant.</p>
-
-<p>The mediæval lawyer was usually a
-priest, and he had found those entails
-grievous obstacles in the way of the
-Church's aggrandisement. Perhaps, too,
-as the country grew in wealth, so rigid a
-law of settlement bore hard on an ever-waxing
-commercial class. To repeal the
-Statute seemed impossible, but the great
-landowners, while proof against force and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-impermeable to argument, were not hard
-to outwit. A legal complication passed
-their understanding; and this one, however
-brazen, had the patronage of many powerful
-interests. Thus, and thus only, may the
-fact of their acquiescence be explained.</p>
-
-<p>And now let us trace out the steps in
-a common recovery with "double voucher."
-The judges had already made one preparatory
-breach in the law. A tenant
-in tail could dispose of his estate if he
-left other lands of the same value; for
-these his heirs held under the same
-conditions as the original property. The
-principle of this decision was ingeniously
-used as a lever to overthrow the system.</p>
-
-<p>Suppose A, tenant in tail, had contracted
-to sell his land to B: he began by
-formally disposing of it to C, usually his
-attorney, and technically called "Tenant
-to the <i>præcipe</i>," or writ. Then B commenced
-an action in the Common Pleas
-against C to recover the estate in question,
-which, he asserted, had been wrongfully
-taken from him. C, instead of defending<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
-the action, "vouched to warranty" A: that
-is, he called in A to defend, on the ground
-that the said A had covenanted to support
-his title; but A, instead of defending
-the action, "vouched to warranty" D.
-This last, called the "common vouchee"
-(in the form in Blackstone he appears
-as "Jacob Morland"), was always the
-"Crier to the Court," and for playing
-his part received the modest fee of fourpence
-on each recovery. At first he
-(Jacob) made a great show at fight; he
-denied all B's statements, and "put
-himself upon the country:" <i>i.e.</i> he
-demanded that the case should go before
-a jury for trial. B then craved leave
-"to imparl" (<i>i.e.</i> to have a private conference
-with Jacob), and the proceedings
-were solemnly adjourned. When they
-were resumed Jacob was not to be
-found: "he hath (it was adjudged)
-departed in contempt of the Court."
-Evidently, or so it seemed, he had no
-answer to make. Then B's claim was
-allowed; C was to have of the lands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-of A a quantity equal to what he had
-nominally lost; whilst A, in his turn, was
-to have the same remedy against Jacob,
-who, having no means at all, cheerfully
-accepted much paper responsibility. Then
-a writ was issued to the sheriff of the
-county wherein the lands were situate,
-directing him to give possession to B,
-whose title was constituted by a record
-of all the aforesaid transactions.</p>
-
-<p>As the centuries went by the proceedings
-became ever less substantial, the action was
-always commenced by the issue of a writ in
-the usual way, but most of the other steps
-were only taken on paper. Sir Frederick
-Pollock says, that if the disentailer were
-a peer, a sergeant was actually briefed to
-move the court in the matter: also,
-one must note that lands held from the
-crown were never subject to this process
-(nor can they now be disentailed without a
-special act of Parliament). By another
-barefaced fiction, colonial property might
-be disentailed in England. The deed
-roundly asserted that the island of Antigua<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
-(or wherenot) lay in the parish of St Mary,
-Islington&mdash;the operation of this geographical
-miracle giving jurisdiction to the Court of
-Common Pleas. One would suppose that
-something simpler might have served; but
-though laymen jeered, lawyers regarded
-these quaint formalities with strange reverence.
-My Lord Coke mentions with
-solemn reprobation a counsel named Hoord
-who scoffed thereat in the House of Lords,
-and whom a judge gravely rebuked as
-not worthy to be of the profession of the
-law, for that he "durst speak against common
-recoveries;" and as late as 1820,
-Thomas Coventry, Esq., of Lincoln's Inn,
-concludes his learned treatise on the subject
-with an eloquent if slightly confused protest
-against any change, "which could know no
-end but an apparent confusion, or clearing
-away a path for the access of some modern
-Pretender to strip the ivy from the venerable
-oak of our boasted constitution, the
-only emblem that remains of its antiquity
-and endurance."</p>
-
-<p>And now for a word on fines. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
-were so called for that they made an end of
-a controversy. They were simpler and even
-more ancient than recoveries. A fictitious
-action was begun by the purchaser against
-the vendor of an estate, wherein the latter
-soon gave in: the case was compromised,
-a fine was paid to the Crown, upon the
-Court giving its consent to this termination
-of the proceedings, and the record thereof
-became the purchaser's title. They were
-likewise used to bar entails, though they
-were not so effectual as recoveries. One of
-the first Acts of the Reform Parliament of
-1833 was the Statute for the Abolition of
-Fines and Recoveries. It was a mere
-question of procedure, for the law itself
-remained unaltered: but disentailment was
-effected by the enrolment of a deed in
-Chancery. And now the dust lies thick
-on shelves of text-books&mdash;a whole system
-of learning, full of intricate details, the
-creation of centuries of perverse ingenuity.</p>
-
-<p>And the land-owners? These, too, long
-since availed themselves of the dark and
-subtle devices of the conveyancer. Sir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
-Orlando Bridgman, a great lawyer of the
-Commonwealth, and finally Chief Justice of
-the Common Pleas under Charles II.,
-invented and perfected the system of family
-settlements which to-day secures the secular
-interests of our great historic houses, as
-well as, if less directly than, any enactment
-could do.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE CUSTOM OF THE MANOR</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Has</span> chance or necessity ever opened to
-you the charter-chest of the respectable
-solicitor in some country town? Then,
-among his records, you have noted an
-interminable series of parchment volumes&mdash;very
-thick, very closely written, some
-centuries old, and one in current use.
-These are the court-rolls of the Manor of
-Wherenot. If you can spell out the
-beautifully written mediæval characters,
-you are sure to light on many a quaint
-record of by-gone folk and their ways, for,
-better than aught else, the manor and
-its muniments preserve for us the English
-past.</p>
-
-<p>Manors, they used to say, arose in this
-fashion. A great lord obtained a piece of
-land from the King; part he disposed of to
-tenants who held of him in freehold (this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-sub-infeudation was stopped by the statute
-<i>quia emptores</i> in 1290); the rest was his
-domain, on part of which he built the
-manor house, another part was cultivated
-by villeins, then the cotters had dwellings
-with portions of land, and the residue was
-waste, where the folk of the manor pastured
-their cattle, gathered fuel, and made their
-ways. Sometimes these villeins were
-slaves, but each had his patch of soil,
-wherefor he rendered some servile office
-to his lord, ploughing his land, garnering
-his crops, or such like. The business of
-the manor was transacted in two courts,
-the Court Baron and the Customary Court.
-The first was attended by the freeholders,
-who themselves constituted the Court; the
-second by the villeins, who merely
-hearkened to and witnessed the doings of
-the lord or his steward. When a villein
-died, the fact that the new tenant had such
-and such a field on condition of rendering
-so many days' labour yearly was noted in
-the records or roll of the Customary Court,
-and this roll, or a copy of it, becoming his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
-title, he was dubbed a copyholder. In
-theory he was a mere tenant at the will of
-the lord, but time fettered the lord's will,
-until the principle was evolved that it
-must be exercised according to the custom
-of the manor, for "custom" as Lord Coke
-put it, "is the life of the manor," and
-so it came about that the holder had fixity
-of tenure while he did his service. His
-position steadily improved, the slave became
-free, the servile toil a money payment,
-and now the court agenda merely
-register changes of title. This account of
-the manor may serve for description, but
-does not represent the real origin, which has
-not yet been exactly ascertained. It was a
-fragment of Old England, with a lord usually
-of Norman race as head, and the relations
-between head and members elaborated and
-controlled by the theories and devices of
-the mediæval lawyer. As manorial law
-was custom, old local usages were preserved
-unaltered; thus, whilst the root idea of
-feudalism was that the eldest son should
-inherit his father's land, and the manor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
-itself did so descend, within it an extraordinary
-diversity of usage obtained. By
-a custom similar to that of Gavelkind (in
-Kent), the copyholder's estate was sometimes
-parted equally among all his sons.
-In other places, Borough-English prevailed,
-that is, the youngest son took everything,
-to the exclusion of his elder brothers; nay,
-by an odd application of the maxim "better
-late than never," a posthumous child ousted
-the brother already in possession; or, again,
-the widow or widower inherited. When
-the tenant died, the lord had a right to
-seize his best chattel (usually a beast), this
-was called a Heriot, and it is yet here
-and there exacted. Many customs are
-old Saxon, many customs were invented,
-or at any rate twisted into fantastic
-rights from mere whim or a not very
-cleanly sense of humour, but here one
-must often merely accept the fact, for to
-try it by the rule of right reason were
-absurd.</p>
-
-<p>Most manors were held of the Crown, in
-return for services sometimes of the oddest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
-character; thus, Solomon De Campis (or
-Solomon At-Field) had land in Kent on
-condition that, "as often as our lord the
-King would cross the sea, the said Solomon
-and his heirs should go along with him
-to hold his head on the sea, if it was
-needful;" and certain jurors solemnly
-present on their oath that "the aforesaid
-Solomon fully performed the aforesaid service."
-Our early kings provided against
-every possible contingency. One tenant
-enjoyed land by the service of holding
-the King's stirrup when he mounted his
-horse at Cambridge Castle. Another must
-make <i>hastias</i> in the King's kitchen on
-the day of his coronation. The glossaries
-are dumb as to this mysterious dish,
-though the learned darkly hint at haggis!
-Or was it "a certain potage called the
-mess of <i>Giron</i>," which, being enriched
-with lard, was called <i>Maupygernon</i>&mdash;which
-last is possibly mediæval Welsh for
-a haggis? Thomas Bardolf, who died,
-lord of Addington, in 5 Edward III., was
-pledged to compound three portions of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
-this dainty dish against Coronation Day,
-and serve them up smoking hot, one to
-the King, one to his Grace of Canterbury,
-and the third "to whomsoever the King
-would." Other manors were held on the
-tenure of presenting to the King a white
-young brach ("lady the brach" of <i>King
-Lear</i>) with red ears; of delivering a
-hundred herrings baked in twenty pasties;
-of finding the King a penny for an oblation,
-whenever he came to hear mass at
-Maplescamp, in Kent: gifts of roses,
-falcons, capons (which last dainties your
-mediæval sovereign held in special favour),
-were abundant. But how to riddle this
-one? The manor of Shrivenham, in Berks,
-was held (<i>temp.</i> Edward III.) by the
-family of Becket, whose head, whenever
-the King passed over a certain bridge in
-those parts, must present himself with two
-white capons, whereto he directed the
-royal attention in choice mediæval Latin,
-"Behold," he said, "my lord, these two
-capons, which you shall have another
-time, but not now," which pleasantry reminds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
-one of the current vulgarism, "Will
-you have it now, or wait till you get
-it?" The service of the Dymocks,
-owners of Scrivelsby in Lincoln, as King's
-champions, and of the Duke of Norfolk,
-as Earl Marshal of England, curious
-enough in themselves, are too notorious
-for this crowded page.</p>
-
-<p>A few quaint tenures are of quite
-modern origin. Thus the honour of
-Woodstock (an honour was a lordship
-over several manors: so "Waverley
-Honour" in Scott's great romance) is held
-by the tenure of presenting a banner each
-second of August at Windsor Castle; that
-being the anniversary of Blenheim, fought
-in 1704; and on each 18th of June the
-Duke of Wellington must likewise send to
-the same place, for the estate of Strathfieldsay,
-a tri-coloured flag to commemorate
-Waterloo. The last century legal antiquary
-pricked up his ears at a fine scandal
-which he fondly imagined in connection
-with the manors of Poyle and Catteshill,
-both near Guildford. Their holders were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
-bound to provide a certain number (twelve
-in one instance) of young women, called
-<i>meretrices</i>, for the service of the royal
-court. Dry-as-dust shook his solemn head,
-invented pimp-tenure (a "peculiarly odious
-kind of tenure" he explained), and the
-forerunner of the man who writes to <i>The
-Times</i> (it was then to the <i>Gentleman's
-Magazine</i>) cracked some not particularly
-choice jokes on the subject. A wider
-knowledge restored the moral character of
-the King, his lords, and the much-slandered
-young women, whose decent dust may now
-repose in peace. In mediæval Latin the
-word was widely used for the female
-servant general or special, and these were,
-it seems, neither more nor less than
-laundry-maids.</p>
-
-<p>Manors of an early date were ofttimes
-held under other manors on equally whimsical
-conditions. A snowball at summer
-and a red rose at Christmas are extravagantly
-picturesque. A hawk was a
-common rent; but in one case it was
-carried to the Earl of Huntingdon's house,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
-by the yielder, attended by his wife, three
-boys, three horses, and three greyhounds;
-and these must be housed for forty days
-at the earl's expense, while his countess
-must give the lady her second best gown.
-Again, the tenant of Brindwood in Essex,
-upon every change, must come with his
-wife, his man, and his maid, all a-horseback
-to the rectory, "with his hawke on
-his fist and his greyhound in his slip";
-he blows three blasts with his horn,
-and then receives curious gifts, and thereafter
-departeth. The lord of the Manor
-of Essington, in Stafford, must bring a
-goose every New Year's Day to the head
-manor-house at Hilton. Here he drives
-it about the fire, which Jack of Hilton
-blows furiously, and (one regrets to add)
-most improperly. But Jack may be forgiven,
-for he is but "an image of brass
-about twelve inches high," whose description
-you read at length in old Thomas
-Blount, the great recorder of all these
-mad pranks.</p>
-
-<p>The holding of Pusey in Berks by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
-Pusey Horn, gifted, it is said, by King
-Canute, is well-known. Sir Philip de
-Somerville, knight, was bound to hunt
-and capture the Earl of Lancaster's <i>greese</i>
-(wild swine) for my lord's larder upon
-St Peter's Day in August. This he did
-till Holy-Rood Day, when he dined with
-the steward, and after dinner "he shall
-kiss the porter and depart." This same
-Sir Philip de Somerville held the Manor
-of Whychenover at half terms from the
-Earl on condition that there ever hung
-in his hall one bacon flitch to be assigned
-to a happy married couple yearly in Lent,
-after a variety of ceremonies like those
-in the more famous case of Dunmow:
-the disposal of the flitch there being
-likewise according to "the custom of the
-manor."</p>
-
-<p>In the customs that made up the inner
-life of the manor one finds a diversity too
-great for classification. However, those
-old English folk were a merry lot; with
-usages not sad nor savage, but having
-much sensible joy in good meat and drink.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-At Baldock, in Hertfordshire, the Customary
-Court was holden at dinner-time,
-whereto every baker and vintner within
-the bounds must send bread and ale
-which the steward and his jury "cam'
-to pree," and presently gave their verdict
-"if these be wholesome for man's body
-or no." To the Manor of Hutton Conyers
-there was attached a great common, where
-many townships pastured their sheep; and
-the shepherd of each township "did fealty
-by bringing to the Court a large apple
-pie, and a twopenny sweet cake." For
-refreshment, "furmity and mustard, well
-mixed in an earthen pot, is placed before
-the shepherds, which they sup with spoons
-provided by themselves, and if any forget
-his spoon then, for so the customary law
-wills it, he must lay him down upon his
-belly, and sup the furmity with his face
-to the pot or dish." And the custom
-further permits the bystanders "to dip
-his face into the furmity," to the great
-delight of all present. To finer issues
-is the money provided by Magdalen College,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
-Oxford, for certain manors of theirs
-in Hampshire, <i>pro mulieribus hockantibus</i>,
-as the dog Latin of the college
-accounts hath it. On Hock Day, annually,
-"the women stop the ways with
-ropes, and pull passengers to them, desiring
-something to be laid out in pious
-uses": the men having hocked the women
-after the same fashion the day before.
-There are traces of this usage further
-afield than Hampshire. Not less jovial
-were the tenants of South Malling, in
-Kent, who were bound to pay scot-ale,
-which fund they agreeably expended in
-"drink with the bedel of the Lord Archbishop."
-The case of Stamford, in Lincoln,
-is noteworthy as showing the origin
-of one peculiar custom. In the time of
-King John, William, Earl Warren, was lord
-of the place. One day he saw from his
-castle wall "two bulls fighting for a cow
-in the castle meadow;" their bellowing
-attracted all the butcher's dogs in the
-place; and these, in company with a host
-of rag-tag and bobtail, chased one of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-champions in and out the town till he
-went mad; all which so delighted Earl
-Warren, that he forthwith gifted the
-common to the butchers on condition
-that they provided a mad bull six weeks
-before Christmas Day, "for the continuance
-of that sport for ever."</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible even to conjecture
-the origin of other customs. In most
-manors, when a copy-holder died, his
-widow had in free-bench (or what the
-common law calls dower) the whole or
-part of his lands. There was one restriction:
-she must remain "sole and chaste."
-Yet, if she forgot herself, her case was
-not altogether past praying for in the
-Manor of Enborne in Berkshire. At the
-next Customary Court she appeared strangely
-mounted upon a black ram, her face
-to the tail, the which grasping in her
-hand, she recited, sure the merriest, maddest
-rhyme it ever entered into the heart
-of man to conceive&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Here I am</div>
-<div class="verse">Riding upon a black ram"&mdash;&mdash;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>Alas, that the rest must be silence!
-The <i>Spectator</i>, greatly daring, gives it in
-full; but that was as far back as November
-1st, 1714. A like custom ruled
-the Manor of Kilmersdon, in Somerset,
-where the doggerel, if briefer and blunter,
-is at least equally gross. And here one
-must refer to the <i>jus primæ noctis</i>, that
-lewd historic jest which, in England at
-any rate, was ever a sheer delusion. True
-that on the marriage of a villein's daughter
-a fine was paid to the lord, but
-this was not to spare her blushes, but as
-compensation to him for the loss of her
-services&mdash;inasmuch as she took the domicile
-of her husband. Nay, the custom
-of the manor usually made for morality.
-There was a fine called child-wit exacted
-on the birth of an illegitimate child, sometimes
-from the infant's father, or, again,
-from the father of its mother. Nay, in
-one or two places the unlucky lover forfeited
-all his goods and chattels. On the
-other hand a curious privilege attached to
-an oak in Knoll Wood in the Manor of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
-Terley in Staffordshire: "In case oath
-were made that the bastard was got within
-the umbrage or reach of its boughs,"
-neither spiritual nor temporal power had
-ought to say, and the man got off scot
-free.</p>
-
-<p>The curious tenacity of the manorial
-custom is well shown in the case of
-Pomber in Hampshire: the Annual Court,
-in accordance with immemorial usage, must
-be held in the open air, but the inconvenience
-of this was obviated by an immediate
-adjournment of the proceedings to
-the nearest tavern. The records were not
-kept on parchment, but "on a piece of
-wood called a tally, about three feet long
-and an inch and a half square, furnished
-every day by the steward." In time these
-strange muniments became worm-eaten and
-illegible; and, as occupying much needed
-room, were thrown to the flames by the
-dozen. (It will be remembered that the old
-Houses of Parliament were set on fire and
-destroyed on the burning of the exchequer
-tallies, October 1834.) Some of the survivors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
-were produced as evidence in a
-case heard at Winchester, which fact provoked
-"a counsellor on the opposite side
-of the question" to dub it "a wooden
-cause." The obvious retort&mdash;that his was
-a wooden joke&mdash;seems lacking; but possibly
-this gem of legal humour emanated from
-the Bench: how often one has seen its like!</p>
-
-<p>Still stranger was the Lawless Court of
-the Honour of Raleigh: it was held in the
-darkness of cockcrow; the steward and the
-suitors (i.e., those bound to attend the
-Court) mumbled their words in scarce
-audible fashion; candles, pens, ink, were all
-forbidden; for, as the authorities vaguely
-put it, "they supply that office with a
-coal." To ensure a punctual attendance,
-the suitor "forfeits to his lord double
-his rent every hour he is absent." The
-learned Camden affirms it was all to
-punish the aboriginal tenants for a conspiracy
-hatched in the darkness of the
-night; again he sees in it a remnant of
-an old Teutonic custom; and in the end you
-suspect that he knows as little as yourself.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>Then there was the white bull which
-the tenants of the monks of Bury St
-Edmunds were bound by their leases to
-provide, that childless women might present
-it to the shrine of the martyred king of
-East Anglia; there was the fine called
-"thistletake," which the owner of beasts
-crossing the common, and snatching at
-the "symbol dear," must pay to the lord
-of the Manor of Halton; there are the
-"three clove-gillieflowers" which the
-tenants of Hame in Surrey shall render at
-the King's coronation; there are all sorts
-of minute details as to house-bote and fire-bote,
-and common of piscary and turbary.
-One more custom and we have done. In
-the time of Richard the Lion-heart, Randal
-Blundeville, Earl of Chester, was on one
-occasion sore pressed by the Flintshire
-Welsh. He summoned to his aid his constable
-of Cheshire, one Roger Lacy, "for his
-fierceness surnamed Hell." It was fair-time
-at Chester, and Roger, putting himself at the
-head of the motley crowd marched off to
-his relief. The Welsh heard, saw, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
-bolted, and the grateful earl there and
-then promulgated a charter granting to
-Roger and his heirs for ever, "power over
-all fiddlers, lechers, light ladies (the charter
-has a briefer and stronger term), and
-cobblers in Chester." Under Henry VII.
-we find the then grantee exacting from
-the minstrels (<i>inter alia</i>) "four flagons of
-wine and a lance," whilst each of the
-aforesaid ladies must pay fourpence on the
-feast of St John the Baptist. Under Elizabeth,
-various acts were aimed at rogues,
-vagabonds, and sturdy beggars, but always
-with a saving provision as to this Chester
-jurisdiction, and in later times the Vagrant
-Act (17 George II., cap. 5) had a like
-reservation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">DEODANDS</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">At</span> one time or other you have looked,
-one supposes, into that huge collection of
-curiosities and horrors known as the State
-Trials. You may possibly have noted the
-form of indictment in the murder cases;
-and if so, one odd detail must have impressed
-you. Having set forth the weapon
-used by the murderer, the document invariably
-goes on to estimate its money
-value: for, having been instrumental in
-taking human life, it was forfeit to the
-Crown, and it or its price had to be
-duly accounted for. It was called a
-Deodand, but the name was applied to
-many things besides arms used with malice
-aforethought. Thus, a man died by misadventure:
-then was the material cause
-active or passive? For instance, his end
-might come because a tree fell on him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
-or because he fell from a tree, in either
-case the wood was a deodand, and so forfeited.
-The name is from <i>Deo dandum</i>&mdash;a
-thing that must be offered to God,
-and this because in early mediæval times
-the Church or the poor had the ultimate
-benefit.</p>
-
-<p>For the origin of the custom one must
-go far back. In Hebrew, Greek, and
-Roman legislation, the physical object that
-caused the loss of human life was held
-accursed, and hence was destroyed or forfeited.
-In England a thing became a
-deodand only when the coroner's jury (or
-more rarely some other authority) had
-found it the cause of death; which death,
-moreover, must happen within a year and
-a day of the accident. If it did, the
-thing was seized, no matter where it was,
-or who had it. In default of delivery
-the township was liable, and it was the
-Sheriff's duty to get the value therefrom.
-If a man had <i>per infortunium</i> (or without
-blame) used the article, the jury
-found that as a fact, and he was acquitted,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-or rather pardoned; but in strict law his
-goods were forfeit as late as 1828. And
-not everything causing death was a
-deodand. If a man fell into the water,
-was carried under a mill-wheel, and
-perished, the wheel was forfeit but not
-the mill. The distinction was sometimes
-difficult. Here are two actual examples.
-A cart and a waggon came into collision;
-the man in the cart was pitched out
-under the waggon-wheels and died. The
-two vehicles, all they held, the horses
-that drew them, were adjudged deodands,
-"because they all moved <i>ad mortem</i>."
-Again, a ship was hauled up for repairs,
-toppled over on a shipwright at work,
-and was declared forfeit. Your mediæval
-lawyer was nothing if not subtle, and he
-soon raised doubts enough to gravel a
-schoolman. He questioned if things fixed
-to the freehold could become deodands.
-Suppose a man were ringing a church bell,
-and the rope, getting twisted round his
-windpipe in some strange fashion, choked
-the life out of him: how then? The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
-rope seemed past praying for, but what
-about the bell? The learned differed, yet
-all agreed that if the timber holding the
-bell got loose, and came crashing down on
-the sexton, the royal treasury, of clear right,
-pounced on rope, and bell, and timber.
-How furiously, with what a wealth of
-legal learning and invention, one fancies
-the utter barristers must have "mooted"
-those fascinating points after supper in the
-halls of their ancient Inns!</p>
-
-<p>The decisions were hard to reconcile.
-Thus, in Edward the Third's time, it was
-held that if a man fall to his death from
-his horse against the trunk of a tree, the
-horse is forfeit, but not the tree. But in
-the same reign a distinction was drawn.
-One William Daventry, a servant to John
-Blaburgh, engaged in watering a horse,
-was grievously hurt. He was carried to
-his master's house "<i>apud Fleet Street in
-suburbio London</i>", and there at even he
-died. At first the horse was adjudged
-a deodand, but Blaburgh got the inquisition
-quashed on the ground that the horse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
-had not thrown his rider. Again, if a lad
-under fourteen fell from a cart and was
-killed, there was no deodand: as some
-opined, because the masses might be dispensed
-with, in the case of one presumed
-sinless from his tender age, and the proper
-end of deodands was to procure masses;
-but others urged it was "because he was
-not of discretion to look to himself." The
-further question&mdash;what possible difference
-this could make&mdash;was not raised; for even
-a mediæval lawyer's speculation must stop
-somewhere. But how if the slayer were
-a lad? A Cornish case, <i>temp.</i> 1302, supplies
-an answer. Jack of Burton, a boy of
-twelve, had a mind to draw the bow. He
-rigged up a target in a house, and shot
-thereat from the outside. One arrow
-missed the mark, and, glancing off a hook,
-transfixed a woman called Rose. Rose died
-forthwith, and Jack fled in horror. It was
-held that <i>le Hoke</i> was a deodand, but that
-the boy, on account of his age, was no whit
-to blame, and (with a touch of kindliness)
-a proclamation was made far and wide that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
-he might return in safety. In this connection
-one recalls the awkward misadventure
-of Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury, in
-the reign of James I., who, being out
-a-hunting, killed, by pure accident, Peter
-Hawkins, his keeper. He had many
-enemies, and all sorts of ecclesiastical and
-temporal penalties were threatened: at
-least, it was said, let all his goods be
-confiscate. But the King turned a deaf ear
-to these suggestions: he comforted the
-unlucky prelate with kindly words, and
-a full pardon, dated 26th September 1621,
-removed all possible danger from his
-reverend person.</p>
-
-<p>If a man met his death afloat, there was
-deodand or no deodand as the water was
-fresh or salt, for these rules had no force on
-the high seas or in tidal rivers: because, said
-some, "there were so many deaths at sea."
-"Nay," said others, "how forfeit the ocean?"
-"But at least," it was replied, "one could
-take the ship"&mdash;&mdash;but here again speculation
-must stop. Although deodands first
-went to the Crown, and were properly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
-applied to pious or charitable uses, yet
-they were often granted to lords of manors:
-so often, indeed, that one of the few references
-to them in English literature&mdash;a
-couplet in Samuel Butler's <i>Hudibras</i>&mdash;treats
-this as the general rule.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"For love should, like a deodand,</div>
-<div class="verse">Still fall to the owner of the land."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>This owner was not seldom exacting, and
-his claim was met in characteristic English
-fashion. The coroner's jury returned the
-value of the deodand at next to nothing,
-<i>e.g.</i>, "a horse, value three shillings," and
-the Court of "King's Bench" refused to
-disturb the finding. Hence one absurdity
-balanced another, and the doctrine was long
-defended. In 1820, Joseph Chitty, in his
-standard work on <i>Prerogatives</i>, maintains
-that "the forfeiture is rational so far as it
-strengthens the natural sensation of the
-mind at the sudden destruction of human
-life." But in later years these mediæval
-ghosts began to walk again to some purpose.
-In 1840 the London and Birmingham
-Railway Company was amerced in £2000<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
-as a deodand! Railway directors were
-no doubt convinced that 9 and 10 Vic.,
-c. 62, which in 1846 made an end of the
-whole business, came not a day too soon.
-Had the law of twenty years before that
-been restored, there might have been some
-warrant for stripping those same directors
-of all their property after each railway
-accident, and one shudders to think of
-the consequences had the coroner's jury
-found the plant used not <i>per infortunium</i>.</p>
-
-<p>One thing must be added, many held
-that the instruments of a murder, though
-forfeited to the Crown, were not, properly
-speaking, deodands, and they quoted as
-illustration the curious case of one Rempston,
-who forced his boat's crew to row
-under London Bridge <i>invitis corum dentibus</i>
-in dangerous weather. He was thrown
-out and drowned, and the jury, it was said,
-brought in a verdict of <i>felo de se</i>, to save
-the boat from forfeiture. But the weight of
-authority was emphatically against this
-view.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE LAW OF THE FOREST</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">A stretch</span> of land, thick planted with
-trees;" so you picture a forest to yourself,
-but old English law held otherwise. There
-were miles of woodland that were not
-forest at all, and acres of pasture that
-were. John Manwood, the Elizabethan
-lawyer, still our chief authority on the
-subject, defines it as "a certain territory
-of woody grounds and fruitful pastures,
-privileged for wild beasts and fowls of
-forest, chase, and warren, to rest and
-abide in under the safe protection of the
-king." Such a preserve was exactly
-delimited, and might contain villages,
-churches, and so forth, within its bounds,
-as the New Forest does to-day. The
-king had certain rights over all, yet it
-was mainly private property; nay, there
-might be spaces in it, but not of it,&mdash;within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
-its Bounds, but not within its
-Regard, as the phrase ran,&mdash;and so
-exempt from its peculiar laws. Manwood
-gives a picturesque, though quite erroneous
-derivation of the term: it was <i>For Rest</i>
-of the wild beasts; but a sounder etymology
-traces the word to <i>foris</i> (= outside),
-for that it was outside the jurisdiction
-of the Common Law, and had codes, courts,
-and officers of its own. The whole business
-was for centuries alike insult and wrong
-to the Commons of England.</p>
-
-<p>Hunting was not merely the chief
-amusement of our early kings: it was a
-necessary pursuit for the keeping down
-of the wild beasts then a real danger
-to the fields and their cultivators. The
-Forest Charter of Canute the Dane (dated
-1016) is a myth; but it is certain that,
-before the Conquest, the sovereign had
-a peculiar&mdash;howbeit, an undefined&mdash;property
-in the woodland. The Conqueror,
-who, according to the Saxon
-Chronicle, loved the tall deer as if he
-had been their father, devastated far and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-wide to make the New Forest; and he
-and his immediate successors punished
-hurt done to the deer with loss of life
-or limb. The Great Charter contained
-provisions against this odious abuse of
-power, and under Henry III. a special
-charter of the forest enacted that no
-man should lose life or limb for killing
-deer, at the same time that it disafforested
-(<i>i.e.</i>, removed from the forest
-to which they had been improperly joined)
-vast tracts of country. After the New
-there was but one other forest made in
-England, that was the land round Hampton
-Court, afforested under Henry VIII. by
-Act of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>An attempt to revive royal rights over
-the woodland hastened the fall of Charles
-the First, and then the Commonwealth
-gave the forest system its death-blow,
-though it was not till the time of George
-III. that the great mass of enactments
-was formally repealed. A Court of Swainmote
-lingers in the New Forest and elsewhere,
-and its officials, called Verderers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
-albeit shorn of their ancient power and
-splendour, do their quaint antics still;
-but by an odd, though happily not
-singular inversion, those old popular
-wrongs are now become popular privileges;
-Epping Forest, for instance, could
-never have become a public park but
-for the Crown rights, and these same
-rights over the woodlands throughout the
-country now yield an income which more
-than covers the cost of the whole Civil
-List. Had the Crown looked more sharply
-to its own, the profit to ourselves had been
-still vaster.</p>
-
-<p>The forest laws, however complex in
-detail, were all inspired by one consistent
-idea&mdash;the preservation, to wit, of the king's
-venison. Even under Edward I.'s comparatively
-humane rule the verderer held
-an inquest upon a deer found dead in
-the Regard, just as the coroner did upon
-a man's body, and the jury found how
-the creature came to its end. The very
-arrows gleaned there were entered in the
-verderer's role. The freeholder within that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
-charmed ground might not fell his own
-timber without leave, lest he should
-spoil the <i>Cover</i>: nor could he turn out
-his goats to browse, for they would taint
-the pasture; whilst he must feed his
-sheep in moderation, else he committed
-the grievous offence of <i>surcharging</i> the
-forest.</p>
-
-<p>The forest had a huge staff of officers.
-First was a multitude of subordinates;
-foresters&mdash;who, if they kept ale-houses in
-the Regard, and encouraged folk to drink
-therein, committed a special crime called
-<i>Scotale</i>&mdash;agistors, woodwards, keepers,
-verminers, sub-verminers, and what not.
-These haled trespassers before the Court
-of Attachments, which was held every
-forty days. In command of them were
-the verderers, constituting, with representatives
-from the forest townships, the
-Court of Swainmote, which met thrice
-a year for (<i>inter alia</i>) the trial of the
-more important offences. Judgment on
-its findings was given at the Court of
-Justice Seat, held but once in the three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
-years, under the presidency of a Lord
-Chief Justice in Eyre of the Forest.
-There were but two&mdash;one for the north,
-the other for the south of the Trent;
-and inasmuch as this officer was commonly
-some great noble&mdash;"A man," says my
-Lord Coke, with a touch of irony, "of
-greater dignity than of knowledge of the
-laws of the forest"&mdash;some skilled professional
-folk were joined with him in the commission.
-The last Court of Justice Seat
-was held in 1670 by the Earl of Oxford.
-It was a mere form: the last but one (in
-1635) had created a fine pother by its
-exactions.</p>
-
-<p>Offences were either trespasses <i>in Vert</i>
-or trespasses <i>in Venison</i>. The Vert (=
-green) was of course the cover; and the
-destruction thereof was called <i>Waste</i>, while
-<i>Assart</i> was stubbling it up to make
-ploughland: and <i>Purpestre</i> (a most
-grievous business) was building on or
-enclosing part of the forest. (As late as
-the reign of Charles I., Sir Sampson
-Darnell was heavily fined for erecting a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-windmill on his own ground in Windsor
-Chase). Moreover, Vert might be <i>Over
-Vert</i> or <i>Hault-Bois</i>, or it might be <i>Nether-Vert</i>
-or <i>Sous-Bois</i>, according as it was
-underwood or not; and in either case it
-was <i>Special Vert</i> if it bore fruit, such
-as pears, crabs, hips, and haws, whereon
-the deer might feed.</p>
-
-<p>Venison, as lawyers understood it, was
-composed of Beasts of Forest&mdash;to wit, the
-hart, the hind, the hare, the boar, and the
-wolf&mdash;and Beasts of Chase. A Chase,
-which was like a park, but was not enclosed,
-might be held by a subject; but
-every forest was likewise a chase and a
-warren, and the beasts of chase were the
-buck, the doe, the martern, and the roe.
-These were described with wondrous detail.
-The hart&mdash;"the most stately beast which
-goeth on the earth, having as it were a
-majesty both in its gait and countenance"&mdash;was
-in his first year a Calf, in his
-second a Broket, in his third a Spayad,
-in his fourth a Staggard, in his fifth a
-Stag, and in his sixth a Hart. If he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-escaped the pursuit of king or queen he
-became a Hart Royal, which no subject
-might molest.</p>
-
-<p>In 1194, Richard C&oelig;ur-de-Lion hunted
-a noble beast out of the forest of Sherwood
-into Barnsdale in Yorkshire, and
-there losing him, made proclamation "that
-no person should kill, hunt, or chase the
-said hart, but that he might safely return
-into the forest again." An animal thus
-honoured was called a Hart Royal Proclaimed,
-and in the 21st of King Henry
-VII., a man was indicted for taking so
-precious a life, but the case apparently
-went off for want of technical proof of proclamation.
-Your precise woodman talked
-of a Bevy of roes, a Richesse of marterns,
-a Lease of bucks. He said that a hart
-harboureth, whilst a buck lodgeth, and a
-hare was seated. He dislodged the buck,
-but he started the hare. He would tell
-you that the hart belloweth, the buck
-groaneth, the boar freameth; and whilst
-the hart had a Tail, the roe had a Single,
-the boar a Wreath, and the fox a Bush<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-(not Brush be it noted) or Holy Water
-Sprinkle. Their amours (<i>e.g.</i> a fox went
-to clicketing), their young, their very
-excrements were dignified in a long array
-of special terms, the divisions and subdivisions
-of the deers' antlers being enough
-of themselves to gravel the tyro in woodcraft.</p>
-
-<p>The peace of those precious animals
-was elaborately safeguarded, and it was
-specially forbidden "to haunt the forest"
-during the <i>Fence Moneth</i>, which was
-fifteen days before and after Midsummer.
-Most forests were surrounded by Purlieus,
-that is, territory which had been disafforested.
-Officers called Rangers patrolled
-this debateable territory to drive
-back the errant deer, and whilst the
-Purlieu-man (namely, the freeholder
-therein) might hunt on his own lands,
-he must call off his dogs if the beast
-once touched the forest. And every three
-years there was a special Drift of the
-forest, which was a sort of census of the
-venison. A man taken <i>With the Manner</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
-(Main Ouverte), that is, in the act of
-doing for the deer, was attached without
-bail. The offender might thus be caught
-red-handed in four ways:&mdash;(1) in <i>Dog-Draw</i>
-he was chasing a wounded beast
-with hounds; (2) in <i>Stable-Stand</i> he was
-drawing his bow in ambush; (3) in <i>Back-Bare</i>
-he was carrying off his quarry; (4)
-in <i>Bloudy-Hand</i> he bore the red marks
-of his spoil. Divers statutes put a yet
-keener edge upon the common law, as
-that under Henry VII., whereby hunting
-in the forest at night with painted vizards
-was made a felony.</p>
-
-<p>And what of the dogs? The forest
-freeholders might keep mastiffs for the
-protection of home and homestead; but
-a Court of Regards was held every three
-years for their Lawing or Expeditation.
-Thereat your mastiff was made to place
-one of his paws upon a billet of wood,
-"then one with a mallet, setting a chisel
-of three inches broad upon the three
-claws of his forefoot, at one blow doth
-smite them clean off." Other dogs of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
-any size were summarily banished the
-precincts.</p>
-
-<p>Royalty was ever jealous of these
-rights. A Fee-buck and a Fee-doe were
-allotted to every verderer yearly (but these
-were but wages in kind); and every lord
-of Parliament going or returning through
-the forest, on summons from the king,
-might take one or two beasts, but if no
-forester was at hand, he must sound his
-horn, lest the kill might seem done in
-secret. But all the king's horses and all
-the king's men could not quench English
-love of sport. Robin Hood and his merry
-band are but the glorified types of a very
-multitude who chased the deer night and
-day, for the forest stretched mile after mile
-over hill and dale, and the tall deer were fair
-to look on, and the taste of their flesh
-was as sweet to the wanderer and the
-outlaw as to the noble or the monarch;
-and the law, albeit cruel, was weak, and a
-touch of danger but gave zest to the
-pursuit. To take a later instance, was
-not Shakespeare himself the most illustrious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
-of poachers? Not on such rovers
-but on the poor hard-working folk within
-the Regard did the forest laws press with
-cruel weight, and yet old Manwood highly
-extols their sweet reasonableness&mdash;"The
-king," he says, "wearied with his anxious
-care for the weal of his subjects, is given
-by law these forests that he may delight
-his eye at sight of the vert, and mind and
-body by the hunting of the wild beasts,"
-and so he finds it in his heart to regret
-that in his day the forests were somewhat
-diminished. And since the sovereign's
-good is now the peoples' good, we
-may agree with him, though not for the
-same reason.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">PAR NOBILE FRATRUM</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large"><strong>JOHN DOE AND RICHARD ROE</strong></span></p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Old</span> English law being full of fictions,
-had pressing need ever and anon of
-imaginary characters to play imaginary
-parts. Sometimes a name was picked at
-random from the street, and Smith, you hear
-without surprise, was in great request, or, as
-those shadows came and went in couples, you
-find Richard Smith as often as not paired
-with William Styles. But your ancient
-scribe lusted after quaintness. He loved a
-jingle, so names like John Den and Richard
-Fen&mdash;rare in actual life&mdash;peopled his parchment,
-and strove for mastery in his mock
-combats. But his prime favourites were
-Doe and Roe, nor would he raise Den or
-Fen or any other ghost, excepting he had
-need of more than two. Here is a simple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
-instance of their use. In early times a
-man who commenced an action had to
-give surety that he would go on with it;
-nowadays, if he discontinue, he must pay
-the costs of the other side, but costs,
-incredible as it may sound, were not
-always the necessary shadow, or perhaps
-the substance, of law; and hence the need
-for the pledge. Under Edward III. the
-practice went out of use, but the form of
-it, as legal forms are apt to do, lingered on
-for centuries in this style:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td rowspan="2"><i>Pledges of Prosecution</i></td><td rowspan="2"><span class="giant">&#123;</span></td><td><span class="smcap">John Doe.</span></td></tr>
- <tr><td><span class="smcap">Richard Roe.</span></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>In the old Action of Ejectment the
-pair were most active. So strange were
-their gambols that even the lay world
-was impressed. In the early years of
-Victoria John and Richard were common
-butts of popular satire. Nothing seemed
-more gratuitous, more idly superfluous;
-but, turn to their history, and you find how
-important and how serviceable were the
-parts they once played.</p>
-
-<p>One must begin far back. In early<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-feudal times the cultivator of another's
-land was either a serf or a person of no
-importance, holding at his lord's will. The
-tenant's position improved with the times,
-leases were granted, and if their conditions
-were broken, a Writ of Covenant, as the
-form of action was called, secured him in
-possession, and gave him damages for his
-wrongs. But this action lay, as the
-technical term is, between the original
-parties alone; so that if he were turned
-out by a complete stranger, or by a person
-claiming through another grant of the
-same landlord, his remedy was merely
-pecuniary. In the time of Henry III. a
-writ was invented giving him full protection
-against anyone interfering under colour
-of another lease from his lord: but the case
-of an Ouster (or dispossession) by an utter
-stranger was not adequately provided for
-until the beginning of Edward III.'s reign,
-when the writ of <i>Ejectio Firmæ</i>, or ejectment,
-was adapted from the proceeding in
-trespass. It called upon the wrong-doer of
-every species to show why, "with force and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-arms," he had entered on and taken possession
-of the plaintiff's land. But, again,
-the result was only money damages: so
-that he was driven for relief to the equitable
-jurisdiction of the Chancellor, who, by
-injunctions and so forth, secured him in,
-or restored him to, possession of the very
-land itself. Presently the Common Law
-Courts took it ill that so much of their
-legitimate business should go elsewhere;
-and, at the end of the fifteenth century,
-they allowed the term itself, as well as
-damages for the Ouster, to be recovered
-under a Writ of Ejectment, and this
-remedy was held proper against every
-species of wrong-doer.</p>
-
-<p>And if, not the tenant, but the landlord
-himself, were deprived of his property?
-or, if anyone not in possession claimed a
-piece of land as his freehold? These
-forms of procedure were not available,
-since they were personal actions, and a
-claimant to the freehold must proceed by
-a real action. These last were in early
-times the most important of all. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-their forms were numerous and varied (the
-assizes of <i>morte d'ancestor</i> and <i>novel disseisin</i>,
-as they were called in old law French,
-were two of the best known), and their
-cumbersome and complicated technicalities
-were cause of much expense, irritation, and
-delay. At last it occurred to some ingenious,
-though forgotten, jurist so to twist
-this Writ of Ejectment, which had all the
-last improvements, as to make it available
-in an action for the recovery of the freehold.
-That was done in this way. A.
-was (let us suppose) the legal and rightful
-owner of an estate occupied in fact by B.;
-he entered on the land with C., to whom
-he, then and there, signed, sealed, and delivered
-a lease for the property in question;
-to them so engaged entered B., attracted
-by their man&oelig;uvring, and speedily kicked
-both into the boundary ditch. Here were
-all the materials for the action of ejectment,
-since C. might truly declare himself
-dispossessed <i>vi et armis</i> by B. from land
-whereof he held a lease from A. In this
-action the main point evidently was: Had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
-A. a right to grant C. the lease? In
-other words, was A. the real owner of
-the land? If the jury said "Yes," then
-judgment for possession followed for C.,
-who, being merely the nominee of A.,
-forthwith passed the property over to him.
-Improvements were speedily suggested.
-Actual ejection was like to prove unpleasant,
-so A. and C., instead of ostentatiously
-soliciting B.'s attention, took with
-them a confederate D., who, in a friendly
-and affable manner, performed the function
-of a chucker-out, and this casual ejector
-(as they named him) was made nominal
-defendant in the action wherein C. was
-nominal plaintiff. Lest B. should be condemned
-unheard, it was provided that the
-casual ejector must give him notice of the
-proceedings, whereupon he was let in to
-defend in place of D. This device was
-a brilliant practical success. Real actions
-pure and simple fell speedily into disuse,
-though it was not till 1833 that, with a
-few exceptions further tampered with in
-1860, they were legally abolished.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>The Commonwealth was a time of legal
-as well as political change. The Lord
-Protector had, with quaint emphasis, described
-the Court of Chancery as "an
-ungodly jumble," and Rolle, his Lord Chief
-Justice of the Upper Bench, before and
-since known as the King's Bench, laid
-violent hands on the action of ejectment.
-"What," urged he in effect, "was the
-use of actual entry, lease and ouster?
-Let all be held as done: so that the
-Court may apply itself at once to the real
-question at issue." Finally, the action
-was in name <i>Doe</i> against <i>Roe</i>, but the writ
-as a mere form was suppressed, and the
-first step was the declaration and notice
-to appear, both served on the real defendant
-or his tenant. The declaration stated that
-the land in question had been demised
-by A. (the real claimant) to John Doe;
-but that Richard Roe had entered thereon
-by force and arms and ejected him, "to the
-great damage of the said John Doe, and
-against the peace of our Lord the now
-King;" and that therefore he brought this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
-action. To this there was appended a
-letter, signed "your loving friend Richard
-Roe," addressed to B., the real defendant,
-and informing him that the sender, hearing
-that he claimed the land, must now tell
-him that he (Richard), being sued "as a
-casual ejector only, and having no title to
-the same," he advised him (B.) to enter
-appearance as defendant, "otherwise I
-shall suffer judgment therein to be entered
-against me by default, and you will be
-turned out of possession." Now, to succeed
-in his action, the plaintiff must clearly
-prove four things&mdash;Title, Lease, Entry, and
-Ouster; and the three last he could not
-do, since they never happened. This little
-difficulty was got over by a consent rule:
-the Courts allowed B. to take Richard
-Roe's place as defendant, only on condition
-that he would confess those three things
-to have happened which never did happen:
-whereupon the real question of title alone
-remained.</p>
-
-<p>So strangely had this action varied from
-its first use&mdash;which was to recover damages<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
-for wrongful possession of land&mdash;that in
-the result these were nominally estimated
-at a shilling; and if A. really wished to
-make B. disgorge the spoils of possession,
-he sued him again for Mesne Profits.
-Although the action was nominally "<i>Doe</i>
-against <i>Roe</i>," the cases are usually cited
-as "<i>Doe on the demise of A.</i>" (the real
-plaintiff) "against B." (the real defendant),
-and whilst John and Richard were the
-favourite styles, we have occasionally
-"<i>Good Title</i> against <i>Bad Title</i>": a
-comically impudent begging of the question
-at issue. If the outside public mocked
-these venerable figures, <i>par nobile fratrum</i>,
-the suitor did so at his peril. A certain
-Unitt (<i>temp.</i> George I.), being served with
-a copy of a Declaration in Ejectment,
-"pronounced contemptuous words on the
-delivery of it," and the judges in solemn
-conclave held that he was in contempt,
-and was deserving of punishment therefor.
-So the masque of shadows went on
-till 1852, when the Common Law Procedure
-Act removed an obstacle which lawyers had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
-walked round for centuries, and consigned
-John Doe and Richard Roe to that limbo
-where so much legal rubbish lies buried
-under ever-thickening clouds of dust.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">SANCTUARY</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Your</span> old-world lawyer was an ardent, if
-uncritical, antiquary. He began at the
-beginning, and where facts ran short his
-fancy filled up the blank. In discussing
-Sanctuary he started with the biblical
-cities of refuge. He had something to say
-of Romulus and the foundation of Rome.
-Geoffrey of Monmouth supplied him with
-the name of a sovereign&mdash;Dunwallo Molmutius
-to wit&mdash;who flourished in Druidical
-Britain (<span class="smcap">B.C.</span> 500 it was said), under whom
-cities and even ploughs were arks of refuge
-for the despairing fugitive. It might have
-been objected that the ancient Britons had
-neither ploughs nor cities; but such criticism
-was not yet in the land. We touch
-firmer ground in the centuries immediately
-preceding the Conquest. In early English
-legislation churches safeguarded the criminal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
-from hasty vengeance, and so allowed time
-to settle the money compensation payable
-for his offence. Sanctuary was among the
-privileges that the Conqueror conferred
-upon his foundation of Battle Abbey&mdash;one
-of many cases wherefrom the Norman
-lawyers built up a system for mediæval
-England.</p>
-
-<p>That system was not always consistent
-or clear, but its main outlines were as
-follows:&mdash;sanctuaries were of two kinds&mdash;general,
-as all churches and churchyards;
-special, as St Martin's Le Grand and
-Westminster. No doubt these last had
-originally also a religious sanction. Such
-places were twice consecrate: Pope and
-King, the Canon and the Common Law
-united in their favour. They protected
-felons, but not those guilty of sacrilege
-or (some held) of treason. They were
-not properly for debtors, whose reception
-was nevertheless justified by an ingenious
-quibble. Imprisonment might endanger
-life, and therefore (so the learned argued)
-the runaway debtor must be received.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
-A man took sanctuary thus&mdash;Having
-stricken (let us say) his fellow, he fled
-to the cathedral and knocked (with how
-trembling a hand!) at the door of the
-galilee. Over the north porch were two
-chambers where watchers abode night and
-day. On the instant the door swung open,
-and had scarce closed behind the fugitive
-when the galilee bell proclaimed to the
-town that another life was safe from them
-that hunted. Then the prior assigned him
-a gown of black cloth marked on the left
-shoulder with the yellow cross of St
-Cuthbert, and therewith a narrow space
-where he might lie secure of life, though
-ill at ease. So it was at Durham. At
-Westminster the sanctuary man bore the
-cross keys for a badge, and walked in
-doleful state before the abbot at procession
-times; and there were, no doubt,
-countless variations. A phrase of the
-time reveals how close the watch was
-now and again. Under Edward II. it
-was complained that the sanctuary man
-might not remove so much as a step<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
-beyond the precincts, <i>causâ superflui
-deponendi</i>, without being seized and
-haled to prison. He was fed and lodged
-in some rough sort for forty days, within
-which time he must confess his crime
-before the coroner at the churchyard gate,
-and so constitute himself the king's felon.
-Then he swore to abjure the realm. The
-coroner assigned him a port of embarcation
-(chosen by himself), whither he must
-hasten with bare head, carrying in his
-hand a cross, not departing, save in direst
-need, from the King's highway. He
-might tarry on the shore but a single
-ebb and flow of the tide, unless it were
-impossible to come by a ship, in which
-case he must wade up to his knees in
-the sea every day. He was thus protected
-for another forty days, when, if he could
-not find passage, he returned whence he
-came, to try his luck elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>He who refused to confess and abjure
-was not driven forth, but if, after much
-spiritual admonition, he still refused to
-conform, he had neither meat nor drink<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
-given him, and so was ended, if not
-mended. A man unjustly deprived of
-sanctuary could plead the right before
-his judges. It was a declinatory plea,
-and must be urged before he answered
-as to his guilt or innocence; it availed
-him nothing to do so after, for he was
-strung up forthwith. This system, however
-harsh, had two very plain advantages.
-It was a short and easy method with a
-rascal, and it powerfully made for scientific
-accuracy in pleading. If a fugitive were
-caught and condemned ere he "took
-Westminster," as the town phrase ran,
-it was no advantage for him to escape
-on the way to execution, inasmuch as
-he was promptly haled forth to the
-gallows. A curious case in the eighth
-of Edward II. perplexed the ancient
-student. A woman was condemned to
-death, but a jury of matrons had no
-doubt as to her condition, and she was
-reprieved. She escaped to sanctuary
-before the arrival of the hangman's cart,
-and when the gaoler dragged her out,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
-the judges bade him put her back again,
-whereat the learned shook their heads,
-opining that hard cases make bad law,
-and the jade should have swung like
-other folk.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole the privilege was strictly
-respected. For instance, the King's justices
-were wont to hold session in St Martin's
-Gate. They sat on the very border. The
-accused were placed on the other side of
-the street; a channel ran between them
-and their judges, and if they once got
-across <i>that</i> they claimed sanctuary, and all
-proceedings against them were annulled.
-And one sees the reason why Perkin
-Warbeck took such care "to squint one
-eye upon the crown and the other on
-the Sanctuary" (as Bacon curiously phrases
-it); yet the great case of Beckett is there
-to show that nothing was absolutely sacred
-in these violent years. Nor does it stand
-alone. In 1191, Jeffrey, Archbishop of
-York, and son of Henry II., was seized at
-the altar of St Martin's Priory, Dover;
-and dragged, episcopal robes and all,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
-through dirty streets to the Castle: this,
-too, by order of William Longchamp,
-Bishop of Ely, and Papal Legate. In
-1378, Archbishop Sudbury complained
-in Parliament that one Robert Hawley
-had been slain at the high altar even
-while the priest was saying a mass. It
-was rumoured indeed that one Thurstian,
-a Knight, chasing a sanctuary man with
-drawn sword, was of a sudden stricken
-with grievous ailments. But this and
-other like stories did not deter the
-citizens of London (<i>circa</i> 1349) from
-assembling at supper time in a great
-crowd, and dragging forth a soldier who
-had escaped on the way from Newgate
-to Guildhall, where he was being taken
-for trial. In another case (<i>temp.</i> Henry
-VI.), where a youth had taken sanctuary
-after having foully slain a kind mistress,
-the good women about St Martin's broke
-in and despatched him with their distaffs.
-Of those who took sanctuary to good purpose
-the most famous was Elizabeth,
-widow of Edward IV., who, in 1471,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-registered herself a sanctuary woman in
-Westminster, and there sat, in Sir Thomas
-More's phrase, "Alow in the rushes."
-But you have read the tragic story in
-Shakespeare. And in a later age "beastly
-Skelton" (as Pope will have him), from
-that same Westminster safely lampooned
-the mighty Wolsey, though for that he
-needs must live and die there.</p>
-
-<p>To catalogue the evils of the sanctuary
-system were to show lack of historical
-sympathy, nay, even of humour. The
-former days were not as these; it had
-its place with the shrine and the pilgrimage,
-the knight errant, and the trial by
-ordeal in the strange economy of a
-vanished world. As the times grew
-modern its practical inconvenience was
-felt for the first time. Yet the occasion
-of the first assault on the privilege of
-sanctuary was one where the benefits
-were conspicuous, and the assailant had
-the worst of motives. It was the case
-just noted of Edward IV.'s widow; she
-had the young Duke of York as yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
-safe with her. Her enemies were at a
-loss for the moment, and Buckingham,
-then the sworn ally of Richard of
-Gloucester, took occasion in the Privy
-Council to attack her place of refuge.
-"There were two chief plague-spots in
-London," he snarled: "one at the elbows
-of the city (Westminster), the other in
-the very bowels thereof (St Martin's le
-Grand). These places were the refuge of
-theeves, murtherers, and malitious, heynous
-traytors! nay," he added, "men's wives
-ran hither with their husbands' plate,
-and say they dare not abide their
-husbands for beating," with more to
-the same effect. Had not Elizabeth
-yielded, Westminster might have witnessed
-a violation as affecting as that
-of Canterbury.</p>
-
-<p>Under Henry VIII. the old order was
-broken up, and sanctuary law, like much
-else, was changed and amended again and
-again. First, all special places save
-Wells, Westminster, and six others, lost
-the privilege. Divers classes of criminals<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
-&mdash;as traitors, and pirates (and afterwards)
-Egyptians&mdash;were formally rendered incapable
-of its enjoyment. Before the
-sanctuary man abjured the realm he was
-burned on the crown of the thumb "with
-the signe of an A," and if he did not depart
-on the instant, he had no further protection.
-But it occurred to over-anxious
-legislators that such a fugitive might carry
-beyond seas precious hints of the mysteries
-of trade or politics, or that, making as if
-for the nearest port, he might but proceed
-to infest another place. So he was ordered
-to abjure the liberty of the realm, but not
-the realm itself; and being branded, was
-confined under a governor in one or other
-of the sanctuaries. Whenever he ventured
-forth&mdash;as he might in the daytime&mdash;he
-must wear the prescribed badge of the
-refuge. He dare carry no weapon save
-a meat-knife, and that but at meal-times.
-He must likewise answer to the daily roll-call.
-If he committed another felony&mdash;and
-crimes done <i>sub spe redeundi</i> had
-been a sore grievance of late&mdash;he was to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
-lose his rights. The governor was empowered
-to hold courts for debt and minor
-offences within his bounds. And so "the
-sanctuary person abjured," as the Tudor
-lawyers phrased him, spent the last days
-of his evil life. I need not dwell on minor
-tinkerings of the system under Henry's
-children. In 1623 the Statute 21 James
-I., c. 28, s. 7 made a legal end of the
-right of sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p>The last of our story is not yet.
-Certain places still assumed the right
-of giving shelter against civil process.
-When the bailiffs invaded the liberty, the
-whole population forthwith set on, and
-pommelled them so lustily that they were
-fortunate if they escaped sound in limb.
-The precincts of Whitefriars and the Savoy
-were the worst places in London. The
-first, renowned in slang, nay, in literature,
-as Alsatia, because (some explained) it
-neighboured the Temple on the East, as
-Alsace did France, was a base and villainous
-Bohemia. Ram Alley (now Mitre Court),
-a local Lombard Street, Salisbury Court<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
-(now Salisbury Square) were its chief ways,
-though probably all between Fleet Street
-and the river, which was not the Temple,
-held of this lawless republic. A bully or
-bravo, or squire of Alsatia was a cant
-name for a penniless and violent fellow of
-the time. He is pictured by Otway in
-his <i>Soldier's Fortune</i> with flopping hat
-pinned up on one side, with a tawdry
-weather-beaten peruke, dirty linen, and a
-long scandalous iron sword jangling at his
-heels. The sheriff with the <i>posse comitatus</i>
-did on occasion raid Alsatia, but his prey,
-if too weak to fight, had ever timely
-warning to escape by land or water to
-some other like burrow. <i>The Fortunes
-of Nigel</i> tells as much of the place as the
-general cares to know, and there is much
-curious matter mined out by the zealous
-antiquary as to other like places of refuge
-in the capital. Thus Fullwood's, sometime
-Fuller's Rents, was related to Gray's
-Inn as Alsatia to the Temple. In 1673
-the gentlemen of that ancient house so far
-forgot themselves as to engage in "pumping"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
-some bailiffs who attempted to take goods
-from out the Rents upon an execution.
-"They were charged with a body of thirty
-lusty bailiffs," and a "strong ryot" ensued.
-Possibly they recollected that their most
-illustrious fellow-member, "broad-browed
-Verulam," had taken refuge there some
-sixty years before, a circumstance which
-gave my Lord Coke occasion to "gall the
-kibe"&mdash;as indeed he never lost any chance
-to do&mdash;of his great contemporary. Then
-there was the mint in Southwark, whereto
-an ex-poet laureate, "poor Nahum Tate,"
-as Dr. Johnson calls him, was driven by
-extreme poverty. Pope's cruel satire
-pictures it half Grub Street half Bedlam,
-the last refuge of the hack and the poetaster.
-The Clink and Deadman's place
-are now forgotten, whilst Baldwin's Gardens
-and the Minories have a more commonplace
-reputation.</p>
-
-<p>About a century after James's Act,
-Parliament again interfered, and professed
-to strip the "pretended privileged places"
-of every shred of exemption, but it required<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
-two other statutes, the 9 Geo. I. c. 28,
-1722, and the 11 Geo. I. c. 22, 1724,
-to make the law's process as effectual there
-as elsewhere.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">TRIAL BY ORDEAL</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Before</span> the Conquest, and for long after,
-local justice in England was administered
-by two courts&mdash;that of the Hundred and
-that of the Shire. The first nominally
-consisted of the freeholders of the district,
-but the real business was done by a Committee
-of Twelve. The second was made
-up of the chief men of the district, and
-representatives from each township; but
-here, again, the work was left to a select
-few. If a man were charged with (say)
-theft before either court, he was tried in a
-fashion vastly different from that obtaining
-to-day. The complainant was sworn on the
-holy relics: "By the Lord I accuse not
-this man either for hatred, or for envy,
-or for unlawful lust of gain." This solemn
-accusation made out a <i>primâ facie</i> case
-against the suspect, who instantly rebutted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
-oath with oath. "By the Lord I am guiltless,
-both in deed and in counsel of this
-charge." Then he produced twelve compurgators,
-who swore by the Lord, "The
-oath is clean and unperjured which this
-man hath sworn"; then the prisoner went
-free. These compurgators were witnesses
-to character. Their testimony had no
-reference to the particular facts of the
-case; they simply alleged their belief in
-accused's innocence, but sometimes their
-oath "burst" (as the curious technical
-phrase ran), that is, he could not find
-compurgators, or those he produced said
-little good of him; or he was a stranger of
-whom nothing was known; or a Welshman
-whose veracity has never been an article
-of faith; or the accused was caught with
-his booty; or was a woman; or the charge
-was peculiarly odious, as treason, or witchcraft;
-then in all these cases there was an
-appeal to the <i>Judicium Dei</i>, the Creator
-was called upon to prove beyond dispute
-the guilt or innocence of the accused.</p>
-
-<p>Trial by Ordeal was more ancient than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
-the Church itself. There are traces of it
-in the Old Testament; it is discussed in
-great detail in the Laws of Manu; a
-famous passage in the <i>Antigone</i> (verses
-264-267) reveals it as well known to the
-Greeks, and before Augustine came, or
-St Columba preached, it prevailed in some
-form or other in Britain. Yet the higher
-ecclesiastical powers continually thundered
-against it, and finally brought about its
-disuse. There were several varieties, but
-many forms were common to all. First,
-there was the ordeal of cold water, chiefly
-reserved for the baser fellow. As a preliminary
-the accused submitted to a fast of
-three days, during which he was watched by
-a priest, then he was taken to church to
-hear Mass; and was adjured by Father,
-Son, and Holy Ghost, by the gospels and
-relics of the saints, by everything held
-most sacred, not to partake of communion
-if he were guilty. Next came the <i>adjuratio
-aquæ</i>, wherein the water was
-enjoined to cast him forth if he were
-guilty, but to receive him into its depths<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
-if innocent. And now, having been stripped,
-he kissed the Book and the Cross, was
-sprinkled with holy water and was cast in,
-to float if he were guilty, to sink if he
-were not. But there was the rub&mdash;how
-about death by suffocation? Sir James
-Stephen suggests that it was all a mode
-of happy despatch! Or (one fancies) it
-might be an elementary form of the famous
-verdict "not guilty, but don't do it again,"
-with the chance of doing it again effectually
-provided against. On the other hand, a
-recipe for immersion in a thirteenth
-century MS. of the Monastery of Becca reduces
-the proceedings to the level of farce.
-The hands of the accused were tied, and a
-rope was put round his waist; "and let a
-knot be made in the rope as high up as
-the longest hair of the man's head will
-reach, and then in this way let him be
-gently lowered into the water; and if he
-sinks down to the knot, let him be pulled
-out as innocent; if not, let him be adjudged
-guilty." How <i>not</i> to sink under such conditions?
-The practice of testing witches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-by throwing them, securely tied, into the
-nearest pond was clearly a survival of this
-form of ordeal.</p>
-
-<p>In the ordeal by hot water the accused,
-plunging his hand to the wrist in the
-boiling fluid, brought forth a stone suspended
-therein by a cord. (This was the
-Single Ordeal, and it became the Triple
-when the plunge was up to the elbow.)
-The arm was done up in bandages not to
-be removed till after three days; if the
-scald had healed the man was innocent,
-if it still festered he was guilty. In the
-ordeal by hot iron, a piece of red-hot
-metal was carried a distance of nine feet;
-it was then dropped and the hand was
-bandaged as already set forth. A knight
-had to thrust his fist into a glowing
-gauntlet; another form was a walk with
-naked feet over a sequence of red-hot
-ploughshares. We have a picturesque circumstantial
-and absolutely untrustworthy
-monkish account of how Emma, mother of
-Edward the Confessor, being suspected of
-an all too intimate acquaintance with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
-Alwyn, Bishop of Winchester, underwent
-this trial. She took nine steps for herself
-and five for the Bishop, fixing her eyes the
-while on heaven. "When shall we reach
-these ploughshares?" queried she. How
-agreeable a surprise to find her little
-promenade already past and done with! No
-need to swathe <i>her</i> feet, the red-hot iron
-had marked them not at all!</p>
-
-<p>The last mode was the <i>Corsnæd</i>, or
-Cursed Morsel&mdash;a piece of barley-bread
-(or cheese), one ounce in weight. This
-"Creature of Sanctified Bread" was adjured,
-in terms terrible enough to make the
-sinner quake, to stick in the guilty throat,
-and cause the guilty jaws to be clenched
-and locked up. If in spite of all it went
-softly down, who dared to refuse belief in
-the man's innocence? It was chiefly for
-the clergy, and from every point of view
-must have been the most agreeable of the
-three, though a legend as untrustworthy
-as that of Emma ascribes to it the death
-of Earl Godwin, father of Harold. As he
-sat at meat with Edward the Confessor,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
-the king brought up an old scandal about
-his brother's murder, "May God cause this
-morsel to choke me," passionately exclaimed
-the earl, "if I am guilty of the crime!"
-Edward blessed the bread; Godwin made
-an effort to swallow, choked and died.
-"Take away that dog," said the monarch
-in what would seem an outburst of savage
-glee. This was on April 15th, 1053,
-thirteen years before the Conquest. Godwin
-in truth died of a fit. It soon was
-the policy of the monkish chroniclers to
-write down the national party of which he
-had been the head, a fact which explains
-the fable were it worth serious examination.
-More interesting to note the survival of
-the rite in the still current rustic formula,
-"May this bit choke me if I lie!" If the
-ordeal proved a man guilty, the punishment
-was fine, death or outlawry, but even if he
-escaped, the Assize of Clarendon (1164)
-ordered that, in certain cases, he should
-abjure the realm. By that time compurgation
-was gone; in 1215 the Lateran
-Council issued a solemn decree against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
-Trial by Ordeal; and soon after it had
-vanished from English law. There is a
-curious reference to it in the State Trials
-as late as 1679. John Govan, a Jesuit
-priest, was indicted in that year at the Old
-Bailey for an alleged share in the Popish
-Plot. With some hesitation he claimed
-the right of Trial by Ordeal as an ecclesiastical
-privilege of a thousand years' standing,
-but Scroggs and North peremptorily refused
-to listen to his plea. "We have no such
-law now," said the latter. Sir James
-Stephen assures us that the formula, "By
-God and by my country," wherein, till
-1827, a prisoner must answer the question
-how he would be tried, sets forth a memory
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>Of the customs akin to Trial by Ordeal
-only one can find mention here. It was
-held that if the murderer touched, nay,
-even approached, the body of his victim,
-the wounds gushed forth blood, thus in
-<i>Richard the Third</i>, "dead Henry's wounds"
-are seen "to open their congealed mouths
-and bleed afresh" as Gloucester draws near<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
-the bier. And according to one of the
-picturesque legends of English history,
-when Richard the Lion-Heart encountered
-at Fontevrault his father's body, the blood
-gushed from the nostrils of the dead king,
-a proceeding which, as Richard's offence
-was at the worst but unkindness, showed a
-somewhat excessive sensibility on the part
-of the royal clay. The oddest and latest
-case of all is from Scotland. In 1688
-Philip Stanfield was tried for parricide at
-Edinburgh; one count of the indictment
-stated how his father's body had bled at
-his sacrilegious touch. The Lord Advocate,
-Sir George Mackenzie of Rosehaugh, the
-"Bluidy Mackenzie" of covenanting legend
-and tradition, conducted the prosecution,
-and philosophic and cultured jurist as he
-was, he yet dwelt with much emphasis on
-the portentous sign. There was no lack
-of more satisfactory if more commonplace
-evidence, and young Stanfield assuredly
-merited the doom in the end meted out
-to him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">WAGER OF BATTLE</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Judicial</span> combat is a fascinating yet perplexing
-subject, having many side-issues
-whereupon the writer must sternly refrain.
-The case of David and Goliath was gravely
-urged (<span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 867) as a precedent to Pope
-Nicholas I., and by him disdainfully put
-aside. The thing itself was unknown in
-Roman law, though the old legend of
-the Horatii and Curatii was part of its
-lore. But it was of the essence of
-chivalry, and the duel and the prize-fight
-were its legitimate offspring. "Where
-the hazel grew," so Mr George Nelson,
-our chief modern authority, picturesquely
-defines its region, but our attention here
-must be limited to England. That it
-was <i>not</i> with us before the Conquest
-moves Bishop Stubbs to something of the
-scholar's mild amazement. The Normans,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-it seems clear, brought it with them from
-their continental home. A native accused
-of a serious crime by one of the invaders
-was tried by ordeal of battle, but a
-Norman had choice of the oath as well,
-and it was also used to decide which of
-the claimants should have a disputed
-piece of land. After the legal reforms
-of Henry II., it became an alternative
-proceeding in a limited class of actions.
-These were the Writ of Right (the most
-solemn method of trying title to land),
-accusations of murder, and treason. It
-had place only in appeals, in actions,
-that is to say, brought not in the king's
-name, but by an interested subject here
-called the Appellor, against whom the
-accused or Appellee might offer to prove
-his innocence by his body. The Appellor
-must accept the challenge unless he were
-maimed by age or wound. Likewise he
-could "Oust the Battle" (<i>i.e.</i> prove this
-mode of trial improper) if the accused
-were caught red-handed. The parties
-exchanged gloves, and gave pledges or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-wads (<i>vadiare bellum</i>); whence came
-Wager of Battle, afterwards the technical
-term for the whole process. In civil
-cases, if the litigants came to terms, the
-judge exacted a fine, called the Concord,
-while he who fought and lost must pay
-the mulct of Recusancy. In criminal
-matters he who resisted not till the stars
-shone forth was branded as Recreant or
-Craven and was forthwith strung up, and
-all his goods were declared forfeit. The
-Charters of Exemption purchased from
-overlord or king show how hateful the
-system was to the old English citizen.
-Henry I. enacted for a consideration that
-no Londoner should do battle, and in due
-course the men of Winchester, Lincoln, and
-Northampton obtained the like privilege.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Leicester is worth the
-telling. In the time of Henry I. Earl
-Robert of Mellant ruled the town. It
-chanced that two burghers, Nicholas and
-Jeffrey, waged battle on a plea of land.
-For nine long hours they mauled each
-other with varying fortune, when one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
-them took to flight, and staggered, all
-unwitting, on the edge of a pit. The
-other saw his danger, and remembered
-that they twain were kinsmen. "'Ware
-o' the pit," he shouted; "turn back, lest
-thou fall therein." The spectators so
-lustily roared their approval, that the
-Earl heard it in his castle, and he, after
-due enquiry, granted that in time coming
-twenty-four jurors of Leicester should determine
-all civic disputes. One strange
-product of Trial by Combat was the
-Approver: a rascal who turned king's
-evidence, and fought with his late companions.
-Sometimes he accused other
-malefactors, and if he came off victor in
-five combats he was released, and banished
-the country. This system fell into gross
-abuse, for the Approver, greedy of freedom
-or hush-money, appealed honest men
-right and left. In the chronicle of William
-Gregory the Skinner (1456) we have an
-account of a duel fought by one Thomas
-Whitehorne, a criminal, caught in the
-New Forest, and lodged in prison at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-Winchester, where he remained for about
-three years, fighting ever and anon.
-"And that fals and untrewe peler (=
-Appelar) hadde of the Kynge every day
-1d. ob." At last a proposed victim retorted
-the lie in his throat, and said that
-"he wold prove hyt with hys handys and
-spende hys lyfe and blode a-pone hys fals
-body." Then the judge "fulle curtesly
-informed this sympylle man" that "he
-and the peler moste be clothyed all in
-whyte schepys leter." Also each must
-have a stave of green ash, three feet long,
-the point thereof "a horne of yryn i-made
-lyke unto a rammy's horne;" and if these
-ash-plants broke, then they "moste fight
-with hyr handys, fystys, naylys, tethe, fete,
-and leggys." Moreover, they must strive
-fasting on the "moste sory and wrechyd
-greene about the town;" but "Huyt ys
-to schamfulle to reherse alle the condycyons
-of thys foule conflycte." And
-we must follow Gregory's precept rather
-than his example.</p>
-
-<p>The Appellee, asking for inquiry as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-his character, was reported "a fyscher and
-tayler of crafte," and therewith the "trewyste
-laborer and the moste gentellyte."
-The peler, with brazen insolence, offered
-<i>his</i> character for inspection. There was
-much dubiety as to where and how he
-had lived when at large, but "Hange
-uppe Thome Whythorne" was the response
-of every reference he tendered. At last
-the day came. The Appellee, as became
-an innocent man, told his beads, and
-prayed long and earnestly, and wept full
-sore, and all present prayed for and with
-him. The "fals peler" scoffed thereat.
-"Thou fals trayter," yelled he; "why
-arte thou soo longe in fals bytter beleve?"
-The defendant's sole answer was
-so lusty a thwack that his staff flew all
-to pieces. Thereupon the peler's stave
-was taken away from <i>him</i>; "ande thenn
-they wente togedyr by the neckys," so
-using teeth and fist, "that the lethyr of
-clothing and fleshe was alle to rente in
-many placys of hyr bodys." It fared ill
-at first with the "meke innocent." His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
-opponent had him down on the ground,
-and near choked the life out of him.
-But presently the meek one got up on
-his knees, and (the combat not being under
-Queensberry rules), "toke that fals peler
-by the nose with hys tethe, and put hys
-thombe in hys yee, that the peler cryde
-owte ande prayde hym of marcy, for he
-was fals unto God and unto hym." The
-peler's subsequent record is of the briefest,
-but, one is thankful to add, of the most
-edifying description. "And thenn he was
-confessyd and hanggyd, of whose soule
-God ha' marcy." Amen. "<i>Victus est
-et susp</i>," so for epitaph wrote the official
-scribe against his name. And the exchequer
-parchments knew him and his
-"<i>1d. ob. per diem</i>" no more.</p>
-
-<p>The Champion, now but the shadow of
-a name, was a nobler offshoot of the
-system. Originally a witness, he was
-finally indispensable in civil cases wherein&mdash;for
-a legal reason not here to be discussed&mdash;the
-parties themselves must not
-engage. He was the proper advocate for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
-churchmen, for women, and for the Crown;
-and his last appearance for royalty was
-in 1820, at the coronation of George IV.
-The Dymocks have held the manor of
-Scrivelsby in Lincolnshire for centuries by
-this tenure, and possibly their representative
-claimed a part in the pageant on the two
-subsequent occasions, but to have him ride
-up Westminster Hall in full armour and
-clang his gauntlet on the floor (as he
-did of old) would have savoured too much
-of Drury Lane pantomime for the taste
-of a cynical age. The Champion's dress
-and bearing were minutely ordered. His
-head (<i>e.g.</i>) was shaven, but whether this
-was to give no hold to his foe, or to fulfil
-some old superstition, is still in debate
-among the learned. In the end he was
-usually a hireling, which fact may very
-well have accentuated the absurdity of the
-system. At any rate, towards the close
-of the thirteenth century it was only kept
-alive by the approvers. Then Chivalry
-came with its Treason Duel, and by the
-time of Richard II. the Chivalry Court was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
-in full swing. Its forms, mainly imported,
-were after this wise. Upon the accusation
-and the exchange of gloves, time and place
-were assigned for the duel, and here the
-lists were set and staked. There were two
-gates, and hard by each a pavilion&mdash;one
-eastward for the appellant, and the other
-westward for the defendant. To the south
-was the judge's seat; and right and left
-were benches for the high-born, while the
-commons were made free of the unenclosed
-field. Near the judge an altar was decked
-with relics; and not far off there stood a
-gibbet and a scaffold. Men-at-arms were
-stationed between the palisades. There
-were heralds in gay tabards, a priest in full
-canonicals stood at the altar&mdash;but it were
-wearisome to enumerate all the officials.</p>
-
-<p>The trial was held not less than forty
-days after the challenge; and the time
-being come, the heralds demanded silence;
-and the appellant was summoned three
-times by voice and by sound of trumpet.
-As he marched forward he was addressed
-by the Constable, "Who art thou, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
-wherefore comest thou armed to the door
-of these lists?" His answer given, he
-was taken to his pavilion, and afterwards
-was made to swear on the altar that his
-cause was just. The other did in like
-fashion. Then the pavilions were replaced
-by chairs whereon the combatants might
-take an occasional rest. Napkins holding
-a loaf and a bottle of water were hung on
-opposite ends of the lists. The marshal
-cried three times "<i>Laissez les aller</i>," and
-the pair went at it. Far better death than
-defeat. If either yielded, the marshal
-cried "Hoo," to declare the combat at an
-end. Then the wretch was taken to the
-scaffold on which his shield was hung
-reversed, his sword was broken, and his
-spurs hacked from his heels. He was now
-taken to the church where a mass for the
-dead was sung over him, and at last he
-was haled to the gibbet where the hangman
-claimed his prey.</p>
-
-<p>This is the form of judicial combat that
-caught the fancy of our great writers. In
-Chaucer's <i>Knight's Tale</i> there is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
-elaborate set to between Palamon
-and Arcite. In Shakespeare's <i>Richard
-II.</i> there is the fiasco of Norfolk
-and Hereford. In <i>Lear</i> we have the fight
-to the death between Edmund and Edgar,
-and "every schoolboy knows" The Templar's
-duel in <i>Ivanhoe</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Chivalry passed, yet not the half-forgotten
-wager of battle. A claim so to
-determine a civil dispute was made in 1571,
-to the great perplexity of the lawyers.
-Elaborate preparations were made, but the
-case was settled in other fashion. Under
-James I. bills were introduced into Parliament
-to abolish it, but they fell through,
-and in 1774, at the beginning of the North
-American troubles, when it was proposed
-to punish the New Englanders by depriving
-them of the appeal of murder, Dunning,
-afterwards Lord Ashburton, described it as
-that great pillar of the Constitution. Burke
-concurred, and the motion was lost.
-Perhaps they have it yet in the States, at
-least Dr Cooper, in editing, in 1857, the
-statutes at large of South Carolina, treats<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-Wager of Battle as an existing fact. In
-England the end came in dramatic fashion.
-In May 1817 Mary Ashford&mdash;a young
-woman of Langley in Warwickshire, was
-found drowned under suspicious circumstances.
-A certain Abram Thornton was
-suspected of the murder; he was tried and
-acquitted, but there was much evidence
-against him, and he had played so ill a part
-in a horrid though vulgar tragedy that the
-relatives of the dead girl cast about to carry
-the matter further. Now, an old act
-provided that no acquittal by jury should
-bar an appeal of murder, so William Ashford,
-Mary's brother, appealed Thornton in
-the Court of King's Bench. He was
-attached, and when called upon pleaded
-"Not guilty, and am ready to defend the
-same by my body." He then threw down
-his glove on the floor of the Court. It was
-a curious turn; for no doubt men thought
-that he would put himself upon the country,
-and stand a second trial by jury. There
-was much legal argument (set forth at
-great length in the reports of the time), for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
-the prosecuting counsel tried hard to "oust
-his battle," but to no purpose, and in the
-end Thornton was set free. In 1819, two
-years after the drowning of Mary Ashford,
-the Appeal of Murder Act (59 Geo. III. c.
-46) abolished the last remnant of Wager
-of Battle.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE PRESS-GANG</h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Smollett</span>, Galt, Marryatt, and the other
-naval novelists, not those well-nigh forgotten
-Dry-as-dusts whose works encumber
-the back shelves of our law libraries, are the
-authorities for the press-gang of popular
-imagination. The sea-port invaded, the
-house surrounded at dead of night by man-o'-war's
-men with stout cudgels, and by
-naval officers with cutlasses; the able-bodied
-mariner knocked down <i>first</i> and
-<i>then</i> bid stand in the king's name; the
-official shilling thrust into his reluctant
-palm before he is hauled off in irons&mdash;who
-has not devoured with joy this wild
-romance, with its tang of the sea, its
-humour and rough frolic, the daring and
-exciting prelude to much more daring and
-more exciting achievements? But how
-far can we trust these entertaining authors?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
-And what was the legal status of the press-gang?</p>
-
-<p>We are like to get nearest the truth in
-a law case with its official documents and
-sifted evidence and considered decision.
-The trial of one Alexander Broadfoot for
-the murder of one Calahan is the best
-available. In the April of 1774 H.M.S.
-<i>Mortar</i> lay at anchor off Bristol. The
-captain held a warrant of impressment, but
-he could delegate his authority only to a
-commissioned officer, whose name must be
-inserted in his order; and the only one
-aboard was the lieutenant. On the 25th
-the ship's boat was sent down Channel, <i>with
-neither captain nor lieutenant</i> to look for
-men. She had no luck till evening, when
-she came across the <i>Bremen Factor</i>, a
-homeward bound merchantman, still some
-leagues from port, but beating thitherward
-up Channel. The man-o'-war's men having
-boarded her, were proceeding to search the
-hold, when they were confronted by Broadfoot,
-the boatswain, armed to the teeth.
-He demanded what they came for. "For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-you and your comrades," was the plain and
-honest, though no doubt irritating answer.
-"Keep back, I have a blunderbuss loaded
-with swan shot," said Broadfoot, levelling his
-piece. The press-gang stopped. "Where
-is your lieutenant?" he went on. (Evidently
-this boatswain knew a little of the
-law.) "He is not far off," was the evasive
-answer, showing that the man's acts and
-words had impressed his assailants. Did
-Broadfoot grasp the fact that they were
-trespassers? At any rate, he let fly, killed
-Calahan on the spot, and wounded two
-others. He was tried at Bristol, and
-acquitted of the capital charge&mdash;for the
-action of the man-o'-war's men was plainly
-irregular; but he was found guilty of
-manslaughter, for that he had used more
-force than was necessary. Another case is
-that of Robert Goldswain, a small freeholder
-at Marlow, in Bucks. In the March
-of 1778 he was a bargeman on the Thames,
-engaged in carrying timber to the king's
-yard; with a protection order from the
-Navy Board to him by name so long as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
-he should continue in that service. But
-these were troubled times, the French had
-just declared for the revolted American
-colonists and our war-ships were frightfully
-undermanned; so, on the 16th of March, the
-Admiralty fixed the next night for a
-general press on the Thames, with direction
-to seize&mdash;despite protection orders&mdash;on all
-sailors and watermen whatsoever, saving
-and excepting merchant skippers and men
-exempted by special acts. Goldswain was
-in the net, and was passed from ship to ship
-down to the Nore, where his captors were
-overtaken by an order from the Court
-requiring a return to a writ of Habeas
-Corpus issued on his behalf. Counsel's
-argument for the Admiralty&mdash;that the
-device of first issuing protection orders to
-lure sea and watering men from their
-lurking-places, and then pouncing on them
-under the authority of a general press, was
-excellent&mdash;did not commend itself to the
-Court, which, in the battle over poor Goldswain's
-body, suspected some antagonism
-between the Admiralty and the Naval<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
-Board. In the end my lords gave way,
-and Marlow received again her ravished
-freeholder.</p>
-
-<p>During the strain and stress of our
-eighteenth century war-making, when we
-had every need of seamen to man our
-battle-ships, and could not afford the
-market price for them, there was much
-impressment, and through frequent appeals
-to the courts the law on the subject was
-exactly determined. It was a prerogative
-of the Crown, a remnant of larger rights
-which at one time took in soldiers and
-ships, or their equivalent in cash (Hampden's
-famous trial scarce needs mention);
-it could not be justified (it was allowed)
-by reason, but only by public necessity.
-On command of the king all sea and
-river-faring men were liable to naval
-service in time of war. The right to
-impress was founded on immemorial usage,
-for, though given by no statute, it was
-recognised by many. It was so held on
-the authority of a case in Queen Elizabeth's
-reign: the sole customary exception was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
-a ferryman; but merchant captains were
-in practice likewise allowed to go free.
-Only in Charles I.'s reign, when all the
-Crown prerogatives were jealously overhauled,
-was there any serious questioning
-of its legality, but it was exercised by
-the Commonwealth as well as by the
-Monarchy. Given up in fact some fifty
-years since, it has never been so in law.
-You find in Horner's <i>Crown Practice</i>
-(1844) a form of <i>Habeas Corpus ad subjiciendum</i>
-for impressed men, with the
-comment that it is little needed now.</p>
-
-<p>Of the enormous number of commissions
-and statutes relating to impressment, an
-example taken here and there must suffice.
-The acts express amazement and virtuous
-indignation at mariners unwilling to serve.
-One (<i>temp.</i> Henry VII.) sets forth that
-such as are chosen, and have received their
-wages, shall, if they give leg-bail, be amerced
-in double, and go to prison for a year&mdash;when
-they are caught. Another (<i>temp.</i>
-Philip and Mary) reproves the Thames
-watermen who, in pressing time, "do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
-willingly and obstinately withdraw, hide,
-and convey themselves into secret places
-and outcovers; and, after the said time
-of pressing is o'erpassed, return to their
-employments." After the Revolution an
-attempt was made to establish a naval
-reserve by means of a voluntary register,
-and so do away with impressment, but
-this was a complete failure. Then, to
-foster the coal and other trades, certain
-exceptions were granted; and still later,
-sailors in outward bound merchantmen
-were exempted because of the hardship
-inflicted on their employers (the hardship
-of the sailor impressed in sight of port
-after a long voyage was not considered).
-When a warship fell in with a merchantman
-on the high seas she impressed what
-men she would. British sailors found on
-board American vessels were hauled out
-forthwith, and this was one cause of the
-War of 1812.</p>
-
-<p>Press-gang stories, more or less authentic,
-are numerous. Here are samples which
-serve to show that the searchers did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
-nicely discriminate between those who
-were and were not legally subject to impressment.
-A well-dressed man was seized.
-He protested that he was a gentleman of
-position. "The very boy we want,"
-gleefully replied his captors; "for we've
-such a set of topping blackguards aboard
-the tender, that we wanted a gentleman
-to teach 'em manners." Sham press-gangs
-for the black-mailing of honest citizens
-were common. In one case a couple had
-given all their money to go free, when the
-real gang coming up made booty of both
-parties, and had them aboard in no time.
-The quarrymen at Denny Bowl, sixty
-strong, were heard to brag in their cups
-what <i>they</i> would do did the press-gang
-dare to molest <i>them</i>, whereupon "three
-merry girls" got into breeches, put cockades
-in their hats, took sword and pistol, and
-advanced, when the quarrymen ran like
-hares. And to conclude, there is the
-legend of the gang that raided "The
-Cock and Rummer" in Bow Street. They
-seized the cook. The customers, fearing for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
-their dinner, or themselves, rushed to the
-rescue. Long the strife hung dubious,
-when the constable (he ought to have
-been a Bow Street runner) stalked in.
-The gang, with a fine sense of humour,
-let the cook go, seized <i>him</i>, and away
-at a great rate, though not fast enough
-to get clear.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">SUMPTUARY LAWS</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Act</span> of Parliament" is a term apt to
-mislead. To-day it is enforced by so
-powerful a machinery that practice conforms
-to precept; but in mediæval England
-much law was dead letter. Statutes were
-often mere admonitions; they expressed
-but an ideal, a pious intention. This was
-specially true of the Sumptuary Laws,
-whereby the dress and food of the king's
-subjects were nicely regulated. If you
-turn over a book of costumes you find
-that man's attire has varied more than
-woman's. The sorts and conditions of
-men were marked by rigid lines. This
-fact was shown forth in their dress, and
-that again re-acted on their modes of
-thought and habits of life. "Men's
-apparel," says Edmund Spenser, "is
-commonly marked according to their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
-condition, and their conditions are often-times
-governed by their garment, for the
-person that is gowned is by his gown put
-in mind of gravity, and also restrained
-from lightness by the very unaptness of
-his Tweed." Of old time man's dress was
-rich and varied, but how to catch its
-vanished effect? In Courts of Justice
-there is still the splendid, if occasional,
-bravery of the judge. See the same man
-in private, gaze on divinity disrobed, and
-the disenchantment measures for you what
-is lost in the splendid garb of other days.
-In mediæval Europe the Church first
-condemned a too ornate appearance. Thus,
-under our early Norman Kings, long hair
-was much in vogue. In 1104 Bishop
-Serlo, preaching before Henry I. and his
-Court in Normandy, attacked this fashion
-roundly, compared his hearers to "filthy
-goats," and moved them by his eloquence
-to tears of contrition. He saw and seized
-that softer hour. Descending from the
-pulpit he then and there clipped the polls
-of them that heard him till he must fain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-sheath his shears for lack of argument.
-This rape of the locks was followed by
-a royal edict against long hair. Alas!
-for this story. Rochester Cathedral still
-bears the effigies of Henry and Maud
-his queen; each is adorned even as
-Absalom, and Time, whilst it has mauled
-their faces in cruel fashion, has with
-quaint irony preserved intact those stone
-tresses.</p>
-
-<p>Two centuries pass ere the Sumptuary
-Laws proper begin. The 10 Edward III.
-c. 3 (1336) ordered that no man was
-to have more than two courses at dinner,
-nor more than two kinds of meat, with
-potage in each course; but on eighteen
-holidays in the year the lieges might
-stuff at will. Next Parliament common
-folk were forbidden to wear furs; but
-the 37 Edward III. was the great session
-for such work, made needful (it was
-thought) by the sudden increase of luxury
-from the plunder of the French wars.
-Some half-dozen Acts prescribed to each
-rank, from peers to ploughmen, its wear;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
-nay, the very price of the stuff was fixed;
-whilst all wives were to garb themselves
-according to their husbands' means&mdash;a
-pious wish, repeated a century afterwards,
-in an Act of the Scots James II. The
-veils of the baser sort were not to cost
-more than 12d. apiece: embroidery or
-silk was forbidden to servants, and these
-were to eat of flesh or fish but once a day.
-Cloth merchants were to make stuff enough,
-and shopkeepers to have stock enough,
-to supply the anticipated demand. Such
-apparel as infringed the statute was forfeit
-to the king. The knight's dress will
-serve for sample of what was required.
-It was to be cloth of silver, with girdles
-reasonably embellished with silver, and
-woollen cloth of the value of six marks
-the piece. Under Richard II. monstrous
-sleeves were much affected. A monkish
-scribe inveighs bitterly against these "pokys,
-like bag-pipes." Some hung down to the
-knees; yea, even to the feet. Servants
-were as bad as their masters! When
-potage is brought to table, "the sleeves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
-go into them and get the first taste."
-Nay, they are "devil's receptacles," since
-anything stolen is safely lodged therein.
-And so a statute of the time prohibited
-any man below a banneret from wearing
-large hanging sleeves, open or closed.</p>
-
-<p>The fashion changed to <i>dagges</i>, a term
-explained by the 8th of Henry IV., which
-forbade "gown or garment cut or slashed
-into pieces in the form of letters, rose-leaves,
-and posies of various kinds, or
-any such devices." The fantastic peaked
-shoes of the fifteenth century, sometimes
-only held up by a chain from the girdle,
-were fair mark for the lawgiver, and under
-Edward IV. no less person than a lord
-was allowed peaks exceeding two inches.
-An Act in the same reign banned the
-costly head-gear of women. Henry VIII.
-saw to men's garb as well as their beliefs.
-His first Parliament forbade costly apparel,
-and there is preserved in the Record Office
-a letter from Wolsey enclosing to the King,
-at his request, the Act of Apparel, with
-an abstract, for examination and correction.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
-Exemptions were not unknown: thus, in
-1517, Henry Conway of Bermondsey
-obtained license to wear "camlet, velvet,
-and sarcenet, satin and damask, of green,
-black, or russet colour in his clothing."
-Under Queen Mary common folk
-who wore silk on "hat, bonnet, girdle,
-scabbard, hose, shoes, or spur-leathers,"
-were grievously amerced. Under Elizabeth
-the regulations were numberless: thus
-there is an act for "uttering of caps,
-and for true making of hats and caps."
-No one was to engage in this business
-unless he had been "a prentice or covenant
-servant" by the space of seven years.
-No one under the degree of knight was
-to wear a cap of velvet. But these were
-not pure sumptuary regulations: they
-were for protection of home industries.
-A statute of the previous reign had declared
-that no man was to buy more than
-twelve hats or caps, be it out of this
-realm; and a previous Act of Elizabeth
-had strangely provided that if anyone sold
-foreign apparel on credit for longer than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
-eight days to persons not having £3000 a
-year he should be without legal remedy
-against his debtor.</p>
-
-<p>On the 15th June 1574, an elaborate
-proclamation complained of "the wasting
-and undoying of a great number of young
-gentlemen" who were "allured by the
-vayne shewe of those thyngs." A schedule
-was appended in which the costumes prescribed
-for all sorts and conditions of men
-were set forth. In the Star Chamber
-on June 12th, 1600, my Lord Keeper
-gravely admonished the judges to look
-to all sorts of abuses&mdash;"Solicitors and
-pettifoggers," "Gentlemen that leave hospitality
-and housekeeping and hide in cities
-and borough towns," "Masterless men
-that live by their sword and their wit,
-meddlers in princes' matters and libellers,"
-and last, but not least, "to the vanity
-and excess of woman's apparel." All
-was in vain, if we are to believe the
-fierce invective of Stubb's <i>Anatomie of
-Abuses</i>. "There is now," he groans, "such
-a confused mingle-mangle of apparel, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
-such preposterous excess thereof as every
-one is permitted to flaunt it out in whatever
-apparel he listeth himself, or can
-get by any kind of means." It was
-horrible to hear that shirts were sold at
-£10 a piece, and "it is a small matter
-now to bestow twenty nobles, ten pound,
-twenty pound, forty pound, yea, a hundred
-pound, of one pair of breeches (God be
-merciful to us!)" After this aught else
-were anti-climax, and so for the women
-he can only say they were worse than
-the men. A new order of things came
-in with the next reign, for the act Jac.
-I. c. 25, sec. 45, repealed at one stroke
-all statutes against apparel. In Scotland
-they kept up the game some time longer,
-but one need not pursue the subject
-there, though a curious statute of the
-Scots James II. (1457) must have a
-word. It provided that "na woman cum
-to Kirk nor mercat with her face mussled
-that she may nocht be kenn'd under the
-pain of escheit of the curchie" (forfeiture
-of the hood). In Ireland there was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
-law (says Spenser) which "forbiddeth
-any to weare theyre beardes on the
-upper lip and none under the chinn:"
-another "which putteth away saffron
-shirtes and smockes," and so forth; but
-these were of English importation.</p>
-
-<p>In the North American colonies sumptuary
-legislation has a history of its own. In
-Massachusetts an edict of September 1639,
-declaims against the "much waste of the
-good creatures (not the tipplers, but the
-tipple) by the vain drinking of healths,"
-which practice is straightway forbidden.
-Excess or bravery of apparel is condemned,
-and no one is to wear a dress "with any
-lace on it, silver, gold silk, or thread under
-the penalty of forfeiture." Again, it is
-provided that children or servants are not
-to have ornamental apparel. Here is an
-individual case. Robert Coles, in March
-1634, for drunkenness is disfranchised
-and condemned for a whole year to
-"wear about his neck, and so to hang
-upon his outward garment a D made of
-red cloth and set upon white"&mdash;a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
-unromantic scarlet letter! These things,
-too, passed away, but in the Maine Liquor
-Law of 1851, one traces the revival of
-the old idea. In England the thing lived
-not again. Under the Commonwealth
-public opinion enforced a "sober garb."
-Charles II. had some idea of a national
-costume, but he was too wise or too
-careless to attempt legislation. In 1747
-the wearing of the Highland dress was
-forbidden, but that was policy, just as
-centuries before the Jews had a special
-garb ordained for them. Also a number
-of laws were passed to promote home
-manufactures: so under Charles I. and
-Charles II. the entry of foreign bone-lace
-was prohibited, though the second monarch
-granted licence for importing same to
-John Eaton for the use of the royal
-family. It would also serve, he coolly
-remarked, for patterns. There is one
-other curious example. Too much foreign
-linen was used, and so the 30th of Charles
-II. c. 3 ordered the dead (save the plague-stricken)
-to be buried in woollen shrouds.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-The relatives must file an affidavit with
-the clergyman as to this, and £5 was the
-fine for <i>him</i> if he neglected his part.
-Did the vision of that unseemly shroud
-really disturb poor Nance Oldfield's last
-moments, as Pope would have us believe?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Odious! in woollen! 'twould a saint provoke!"</div>
-<div class="verse">Were the last words that poor Narcissa spoke.</div>
-<div class="verse">"No: let a charming chintz and Brussels lace</div>
-<div class="verse">Wrap my cold limbs and shade my lifeless face!"</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>"Narcissa" had her wish: the "Brussels
-lace" of her head-dress, her "Holland
-shift," a "pair of new kid gloves on her
-cold hands," were the talk of the town;
-so they tricked her out for Westminster
-Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>Almost up to Waterloo the Act lingered
-on the Statute Book, till some ingenious
-rascal brought an action against various
-clergymen for the £5 penalty, for that
-they had not certified to churchwardens
-the cases of non-compliance. And so,
-in 1814, the 54th George III. c. 108
-swept away the strange provision.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center">PRINTED BY TURNBULL AND SPEARS, EDINBURGH</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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